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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Early cancer of the stomach is defined as a carcinomatous degeneration restricted to gastric mucosa and/or submucosa. The size of extension as well as the mode of perhaps previously spread metastases are not taken into account. The addition early is correct as far as the pathologic-anatomical localized findings are concerned. The clinician however associates early besides the idea of timely recognition and therapy with a better prognosis, e.g. real recovery for the patient. Yet, so-called early gastric cancer does by no means imply absolute curing. Therefore it seems to be more pregnant to speak mucosal and/or submucosal cancer of the stomach.
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PMID:[Early cancer of the stomach (author's transl)]. 125 Jan 86

Between January 1986 and November 1990, 231 patients underwent resection for primary gastric adenocarcinoma at Chang Gung Memorial Hospital in southern Taiwan. Thirty-nine (17%) of these patients had early gastric cancer (limited to the mucosa or submucosa regardless of nodal metastases). Epigastric pain was the most frequent symptom (71.8%). The lesions were located in the lower third of the stomach in 84.6% of the patients and in the middle third in 15.4%. A preoperative diagnosis of gastric cancer was achieved in 94% of patients by endoscopic examination with biopsies. All of the patients underwent distal subtotal gastrectomy without mortality. Macroscopically, 84.6% of cases were included in types IIc, III, and IIc-III. One patient died of multiple liver metastases 3.2 years after operation. The cumulative survival rate at 5 years is 92.9%. We comment on these matters and place early gastric cancer in Taiwan into a more global context.
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PMID:Early gastric cancer in southern Taiwan. 129 35

Five hundred ninety-two patients with early gastric cancer underwent surgical resection from 1970 to 1986 in our hospital, and 13 died from a recurrence of their disease. A careful analysis of these 13 patients suggests that carcinomas which invaded to the submucosa tend to recur more often than those confined to the mucosa. Well differentiated and papillary adenocarcinomas characterized by protruded or elevated lesions tend to recur earlier than poorly differentiated or signet-ring cell carcinomas characterized by depressed or excavated lesions. However, both types recurred from hematogenous metastases, with the liver being the most common site. Therefore, the macroscopic and histological features presently used to characterize early gastric cancer do not provide sufficient information to accurately predict which patients are at most risk for recurrence.
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PMID:Clinicopathologic evaluation of recurrence in early gastric cancer. 131 74

Between 1965 and 1985, 51 of 1500 patients (3.4%) with gastric cancer who had gastric resection had signet ring cell gastric cancer. Patients with this form of cancer tended to be younger and female; the tumors were smaller and involved the stomach body, serosal invasion was less prominent, and lymph node metastases were less likely to be present. Early mucosal and submucosal cancer was present in 54.9% of the patients with the signet ring cell and in 24.6% with other types of gastric cancer. In 15.7% of patients with signet ring cell cancer, a noncurative resection was performed. The 5-year survival rate was 74.5% for patients with signet ring cell cancer and 52.4% for those with other types of gastric cancer (P less than 0.01). In patients with signet ring cell gastric cancer, the lesion is less extensive; thus, these patients probably can expect a longer survival time.
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PMID:Signet ring cell carcinoma of the stomach. 131 89

In the new UICC TNM system for gastric cancer approved in 1985, a T1 lesion with lymph node (LN) metastasis is classified as stage, Ib; in the old TNM system this was classified as stage III. This is contradictory to a general rule of the UICC TNM system, whereby cancer with LN metastasis is classified as stage II or III. Two thousand and sixty-three patients with less than T4 gastric cancer who were treated at Seoul National University Hospital from 1970 to 1986 were analysed for significant prognostic factors. Survival curves were subsequently analysed according to the number of LN metastases and the depth of invasion. As a result of multivariate study for clinical and pathological features such as age, tumour location, gross appearance, histological type, depth of tumour invasion and regional lymph node metastasis, we confirmed that only two factors--regional lymph node metastasis and depth of gastric wall invasion--are significant. We showed that when the LN variable is classified according to the number of LN metastases (0 group, 1-3 group, > 3 group) like the UICC TNM classification of colorectal cancer, the survival curves are similar to those reported by the Japanese Research Society for Gastric Cancer. The authors propose the modification of the UICC TNM classification system according to depth of invasion and the number of LN metastases, whereby a T1 lesion with LN metastasis is classified as stage IIa instead of stage 1b.
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PMID:Is the new UICC staging system of gastric cancer reasonable? (Comparison of 5-year survival rate of gastric cancer by old and new UICC stage classification). 134 Dec 53

CH40 and CH1500AA are newly prepared carbon suspensions which were examined as vital staining dyes for their usefulness in visualizing lymphatics at operation and to blacken lymph nodes. In mice, these carbon suspensions at 0.001 ml/g of body weight and India ink were injected subcutaneously into the footpad of the right hindpaw. Regional lymph nodes were visualized and were examined stereomicroscopically to determine how intensely these nodes blackened with carbon suspensions. Compared with India ink, CH40 and CH1500AA blackened the regional lymph nodes much faster and more vividly (1-8 min. after subcutaneous injection). As analyzed by centrifugal particle size distribution, CH40 and CH1500AA are narrowly distributed with a small particle size (150 and 167 nm, respectively, in mean diameter). By contrast, India ink is comprised of widely distributed and relatively large particles in suspension (mean diameter--254 nm). In 10 patients undergoing radical gastrectomy for treatment of stomach cancer, CH40 blackened 69% of regional lymph nodes with metastases (38 of 55) and 76% of those nodes without metastases (387 of 512).
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PMID:Lymph nodal vital staining with newer carbon particle suspensions compared with India ink: experimental and clinical observations. 138 47

The deepest gastric cancer invasion into the tela subserosa is expressed as the ss-cancer. Subserosal gastric cancers (ss) can be divided into 4 subtypes; ss alpha, ss beta, (ss gamma) and ss gamma, pathologically. These four subtypes were compared to cancerous invasion into the muscularis propria (pm-cancer) and cancerous invasion with serosal exposure (se-cancer). During the 10 years from 1979 to 1988, a total of 938 cases with gastric cancer were resected in the First Department of Surgery, Kurume University Hospital. Of these, 104 (11.1%) cases were ss-cancers, consisting of 28 (27%) cases of ss alpha, 33 (32%) cases of ss beta, 4 (3%) cases of (ss gamma) and 39 (38%) cases of ss gamma. Pm-cancers and ss-cancers were most frequently observed in Borrmann type 2, macroscopically, and in the differentiated type, histologically. On the other hand, se-cancers were frequently observed in Borrmann type 3 and in an undifferentiated type. Positive lymph node metastases were found in 49.1% of pm-cancers, in 50.0% of ss-cancers and in 79.9% of se-cancers (p < 0.01), with no statistical difference in the positive lymph node metastasis rates for the subdivisions of ss-cancer. In ss-cancer, however, there was a statistical difference in prognosis according to the tumor size, and according to the degree of subserosal infiltration. The 5-year survival rate was 82.3% for pm-cancer, 75.0% for ss-cancer and 34.7% for se-cancer (p < 0.01).
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PMID:Retrospective studies of gastric subserosal (ss) cancer--in comparison to pm- and se-cancers. 140 36

Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) in plasma is useful for the detection of recurrent colonic or gastric cancer and the monitoring of plasma in patients with recurrent cancer displaying therapeutic effect. We report a sharp decline of CEA in a patient with recurrent gastric cancer by 6 months oral administration of UFT. The patient was an 81-year-old male who had undergone gastrectomy for advanced gastric cancer. Eight months post-operatively, the plasma CEA began to rise logarithmically, and recurrent tumor in the remnant stomach and liver metastasis were detected by fibergastroscope (FGS) and abdominal CT. After administration of UFT at a dose of 300 mg per day, CEA abruptly declined logarithmically and normalized in 6 months. Presently marked reduction of recurrent foci and metastases were found by FGS and abdominal CT. Therefore sequential changes in plasma CEA in this patient can be considered to reflect the effect of therapy for recurrent gastric cancer by UFT.
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PMID:[Sharp decline in plasma CEA and reduction of liver metastasis after UFT administration in a patient with recurrent gastric cancer]. 141 17

We studied the amounts of nuclear DNA in gastric cancer metastases histologically and cytochemically by flow cytometry, which was performed retrospectively on paraffin-embedded specimens from 95 patients. At surgery, all cases of aneuploid cancer were positive for lymph node metastases. Liver metastases were frequently seen in aneuploid cancer (63%, P < 0.01), while lung metastases were the most common in diploid cancer (50%, P < 0.05). The incidence of peritoneal metastasis was high in undifferentiated diploid cancer (72%, P < 0.01). Local lymph node recurrence after surgery was more common in aneuploid than in diploid cancer (P < 0.01). The incidence of bone and distant lymph node metastasis was found to be strongly dependent on tissue differentiation. The DNA ploidy pattern is thus considered to be closely linked to lymph node, liver, and lung metastases in gastric cancer.
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PMID:Metastatic mode and DNA ploidy in gastric carcinoma. 142 60

Right and left paracardial dissection represents an obligatory step in gastrectomy for gastric cancer of the lower half of the stomach because a second-level lymphadenectomy is part of the radical surgery for malignancy at this site. Whereas right and left paracardial dissection is easily accomplished during total gastrectomy, there is doubt as to whether subtotal gastrectomy achieves the same radical clearance of these groups of lymph nodes. This study therefore compared the number of lymph nodes dissected and the frequency of metastases in these compartments in 14 patients undergoing total gastrectomy and 22 submitted to subtotal gastrectomy. The mean number of lymph nodes dissected in the right paracardial compartment was 7.1 per patient undergoing total gastrectomy and 6.7 per patient in subtotal gastrectomy (P = 0.7). The mean numbers of left paracardial lymph nodes dissected in total and subtotal gastrectomy were 3.4 and 4.1 per patient respectively (P = 0.3). These data show that the same degree of radical clearance can be achieved in these nodal compartments, irrespective of the extent of gastric resection.
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PMID:Adequacy of paracardial dissection in subtotal versus total gastrectomy. 142 65


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