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Query: UMLS:C0024623 (
gastric cancer
)
36,219
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Connecticut Tumor Registry (CTR) was established in 1941 and is the oldest population-based cancer registry in the world. Since 1935, all malignant tumors have been registered, and cancer patients are followed annually for vital status. Reporting by hospitals of all cancers diagnosed in Connecticut residents became mandatory in 1971. The reporting physician or hospital makes the initial determination as to whether a tumor is an independent primary cancer, recurrent tumor, or metastatic lesion. In addition, the Registry maintains stringent quality control procedures to avoid duplication of cancer reports. The Registry reviews reports of new cancers developing in patients with a previous primary cancer to rule out the possibility of misdiagnosed metastases. Microscopic confirmation of the diagnosis has improved from 49% in 1935-39 to 94% in 1980-82. Cancers reported only from death certificates currently account for only 1% of all registrations. Between 1935 and 1979, cancer rates in Connecticut almost doubled among males and increased by more than one-third among females; notable increases were seen for cancers of the lung and prostate in males and cancers of the lung and breast in females. In recent years, rates for malignant melanoma of the skin have increased dramatically among both sexes.
Stomach cancer
has decreased over time in both sexes, as has cervical cancer in females. Although the CTR has used several revisions of the International Classification of Diseases to code the primary site of cancers, rules for the coding of multiple primary cancers have remained essentially the same. Among 253,536 individuals diagnosed between 1935 and 1982 with an
invasive cancer
, 16,727 (6.6%) nonsimultaneous second cancers were evaluated and are discussed in subsequent chapters of this monograph. Simultaneous cancers were diagnosed in 4,107 individuals and accounted for approximately 20% of all multiple cancers reported in Connecticut. The most frequent simultaneous tumors were cancers of the colon, rectum, prostate, lung, breast, and bladder. Some simultaneous cancers (chronic lymphocytic leukemia, testis, prostate, rectum, uterine corpus, and liver and biliary tract) occurred almost as frequently as the number of subsequent nonsimultaneous tumors, which suggests that the patterns of risk over time for certain sites may be distorted when diagnoses are advanced in time and removed from analysis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Cancer registration in Connecticut and the study of multiple primary cancers, 1935-82. 408 94
Changes in environments and life styles in Japan have caused the recent changes in the time trends of cancer incidence for various sites. Using the data from the Osaka Cancer Registry, time trends during 1966-80 were analysed for cancer incidence of the leading 5 sites: stomach, lung, liver, uterus and breast. Age-adjusted incidence rates of cancers of the stomach (both sexes) and uterus (
invasive cancer
) decreased to 75% and 64% respectively between the two periods of 1966-68 and 1978-80 while cancers of the lung, liver, and breast reached 163%, 140%, and 143 % during the same period. Decrease of
stomach cancer
incidence was observed in all age-groups under 79, however, not in the 25-44 age-groups among females. Analyzing the histological data in the registry, it was noticed that estimated incidence of the intestinal type of stomach carcinoma had decreased more rapidly than the diffuse type. In the 30-49 age-groups among females, no decrease was observed of the diffuse type of carcinoma. Concerning lung cancer, a marked increase was observed over 60 years of age. The age-specific incidence curves by birth cohort showed no or very small cohort effects for the population born 1920-29. Among males, percentages of adenocarcinoma and undifferentiated carcinoma have increased and that of epidermoid carcinoma decreased. The change was more marked in the age-groups younger than 59. Liver cancer showed the 3rd highest incidence rate among males and 6th among females. A rising trend in recent years was noticeable over 45 years of age among males. For the invasive uterine carcinoma, the incidence rate has been decreasing in all ages. Comparing these figures with those of whites in Connecticut or of Japanese in Hawaii, the former was higher than the latter and the difference was larger in age-groups over 40. The recent age incidence curve of breast cancer in Osaka came to be close to that in Iceland in 1930-49 when the curve had kept a constant level for age-groups after menopause. Birth cohort effect was observed for in these age classes.
...
PMID:[Time trends in cancer incidence in Osaka]. 670 15
A nutrition intervention trial involving > 3000 participants was conducted in Linxian, China, where the esophageal and
stomach cancer
mortality rates are among the highest in the world and suspicion exists that chronic deficiencies of multiple nutrients are etiologically involved. The trial was randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled and tested the effect of multivitamin and multimineral supplements in reducing cancer incidence and mortality in adults with cytologically detected esophageal dysplasia. Endoscopic and cytologic examinations of samples of trial participants during the intervention allowed evaluation of intermediate endpoints in esophageal and gastric carcinogenesis, including asymptomatic histologic precancerous lesions and early
invasive cancer
, epithelial proliferation, and cytologic abnormalities. Results from these ancillary studies suggest that multivitamin and multimineral supplementation may decrease proliferation and enhance cytologic reversion to nondysplasia.
...
PMID:Effect of nutrition intervention on intermediate endpoints in esophageal and gastric carcinogenesis. 749 41
The epidemiologic evidence for a role of antioxidants in inhibiting carcinogenesis in humans is briefly summarized. Mechanistic pathways of protection by antioxidants are illustrated with the prevailing model of gastric carcinogenesis in humans. In this model, ascorbic acid may be involved at the early stage of chronic gastritis; its secretion into the stomach is inhibited by infection with Helicobacter pylori, a major cause of gastritis. Ascorbic acid may also play a role in blocking the nitrosation of amines and related compounds in the gastric microenvironment. Carotenoids are also involved in the chain of
gastric cancer
causation and apparently play an important role in preventing mutations in the advanced stages of the process. The
gastric cancer
model supports the notion that
invasive cancer
is the result of insufficient control of oxidative stress applied to replicating cells over a prolonged period of time.
...
PMID:The role of antioxidants in gastric carcinogenesis. 774 80
Cost-effectiveness analysis for cervical cancer screening in Japan was performed to estimate the cost per life-year saved by the screening; cost-effectiveness ratio (CER). The analysis was made using a simulation model to estimate long-term cost and effectiveness of the screening programs. CER of cervical cancer screening was estimated to be US$ 40,604 which was 2.4 times more expensive than that for
gastric cancer
screening but was about the same as that for colorectal cancer screening. It was within the range of cost-effectiveness of other cancer screening programs financed under the Health and Medical Services Law for the Aged in Japan. We performed sensitivity analysis on the following seven estimates, the screening charge, the sensitivity and the specificity of the screening test, the frequency of carcinoma in situ (CIS) among cases detected in the screening program, the initial cost and the terminal cost for patients with
invasive cancer
, and the incidence rate of cervical cancer. The sensitivity analysis demonstrated that the screening charge was the most influential factor on CER. CER was fairly stable under various assumptions on the accuracy of the screening test, the frequency of carcinoma in situ (CIS), the treatment cost for patient, and the incidence of cervical cancer. CER was less sensitive to the changes in incidence, even to as low as a 50% decrease of the current figure. Then if the incidence rate becomes 85% of the current figure in 2015, CER would be US$ 48,176 and it was suggested that the cervical cancer screening would remain reasonably cost-effective until the year 2015.
...
PMID:Cost-effective analysis of mass screening for cervical cancer in Japan. 933 11
Precise correlation of histomorphology with the results of molecular genetic analysis is difficult in
gastric cancer
tissue composed of intestinal and diffuse types. A novel microdissection procedure was applied to correlate p53 and APC allelic loss with histologic type and tumor stage (mucosal vs.
invasive cancer
) in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded specimens of 25 gastric cancers. In addition, mucosal and invasive lesions were dissected from each of 11 invasive gastric cancers to study progression, and allelic loss of the p53 and APC genes was assessed. The p53 gene underwent loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in 4 of 4 informative cases of intestinal-type
gastric cancer
with mucosal lesions associated with invasion. By contrast, no p53 LOH was found among 6 informative cases with mucosal cancer. LOH of the APC gene in both intestinal and diffuse types of cancer was detected in 4 of 7 and 5 of 6 informative cases, respectively. These data suggest that allelic deletion of the p53 gene in intestinal-type gastric carcinoma predicts the invasive potential of mucosal cancer, and that inactivation of the APC gene plays a role in the genetic tumorigenesis of both intestinal and diffuse types of
gastric cancer
. Microdissection can correlate genetic alterations with histologic morphology in
gastric cancer
.
...
PMID:Correlation of histologic morphology and tumor stage with molecular genetic analysis using microdissection in gastric carcinomas. 999 Apr 80
DNA aneuploidy, p53 overexpression, and high cell proliferation frequently occur in
gastric cancer
. However, little is known about the time of their appearance throughout cancer progression. Therefore, the objective of the present study was to determine when such abnormalities occur during
gastric cancer
progression. We classified the gastric cancers examined into intestinal (n = 65) and diffuse (n = 34) types. DNA ploidy was examined using flow cytometry and expression of MIB-1 and p53 immunoreactivity were studied using the avidin-biotin complex method in three stages of
gastric cancer
(mucosal, submucosal, deeply
invasive cancer
, i.e., advanced cancer). The incidence of DNA aneuploidy in intestinal-type mucosal cancers (15/27, 55.6%) was lower than that of submucosal invasive cancers (14/16, 87.5%) or advanced cancers (19/22, 86.4%), while a low incidence of DNA aneuploidy was observed in each diffuse-type cancer group (mucosal, 1/12, 8.3%; submucosal invasive, 3/9, 33.3%; advanced, 8/14, 57.1%). Although overexpression of the p53 gene in intestinal-type cancer was found in early stage, that in diffuse-type cancer was observed in advanced stage. Among the intestinal-type mucosal cancers, the MIB-1 percent positive was higher in aneuploid tumors than diploid ones. DNA aneuploidy and overexpression of the p53 gene may play an important role in the early tumorigenesis of intestinal-type
gastric cancer
and in the late event of tumorigenesis of diffuse-type
gastric cancer
.
...
PMID:Role of DNA aneuploidy, overexpression of p53 gene product, and cellular proliferation in the progression of gastric cancer. 1039 30
We have reviewed the clinicopathological features of submucosal
gastric cancer
with lymph node metastasis. The degree of vertical submucosal infiltration was classified into three stages as sm1, sm2 or sm3. The number of cases with lymph node metastasis of sm3 was significantly more than that of sm1 or sm2. We found no correlation between the tumor size and the rate of lymph node metastasis from submucosal
invasive cancer
. Accordingly, we concluded that the vertical submucosal infiltration was a more important factor for lymph node metastasis than horizontal infiltration. Minimal invasive surgery was recommended for a tumor measuring 1 cm or less in size with vertical submucosal invasion of sm1 or sm2.
...
PMID:Submucosal gastric cancer with lymph node metastasis--a clinicopathological study. 1065 94
A worldwide-accepted histologic, classification of the gastric carcinomatous and precancerous lesions is a prerequisite for a consistent recording of epidemiologic data and for both developing and evaluating primary and secondary preventive efforts. Different nomenclatures have been proposed for gastric precancerous lesions in eastern countries and in Japan. This article presents a classification of gastric precancerous lesions resulting from an international consensus conference involving pathologists of different countries. Five main diagnostic categories are identified. To allow comparisons with the nomenclature proposed by the Japanese Research Society for
Gastric Cancer
, each category was also assigned a numeric identification: 1 = normal, 2 = indefinite for dysplasia, 3 = noninvasive neoplasia, 4 = suspicious for
invasive cancer
, and 5 = cancer. The interobserver reproducibility of the histologic classification was tested in a series of 46 cases. By collapsing benign alterations (categories 1+2) versus noninvasive neoplasia (category 3) versus suspicious for
invasive cancer
and fully appearing carcinomatous lesions (categories 4+5), the general agreement value was 77.7%, whereas kappa coefficient was 0.63. By examining gastric precancerous lesions from diverse populations, the authors agreed that the gastric precancerous process is universal and the differences in nomenclatures are merely semantics. The international Padova classification of the gastric precancerous lesions is submitted to the attention of the international scientific community, which is invited to test and to improve on it.
...
PMID:Gastric dysplasia: the Padova international classification. 1134 86
Recently stage-oriented treatment for
gastric cancer
has been done in Japan. Endoscopic mucosal resection for intramucosal cancer and wedge resection under laparoscopy for minimal
invasive cancer
in the stomach have been performed. For advanced
gastric cancer
, extended lymph node dissection(D2) has been applied as standard treatment in Japan. However, new strategy has been required for advanced
gastric cancer
with distant lymph node metastasis and/or peritoneal dissemination. It is well known that gene therapy for cancer has limitation of efficacy, but we believe the new strategy will be available in post-genome era for
gastric cancer
treatment using 1. developing novel adenovirus, 2. usage of drug delivery system and 3. effective treatment for adverse effect.
...
PMID:[Gastric cancer--novel strategy of gene therapy for gastric cancer]. 1119 69
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