OBJECTIVE To investigate the prognosis of advanced gastric carcinoma patients with liver metastasis, and provide a foundation for rational operations. METHODS The operations and prognosis of 102 primary gastric carcinoma patients with liver metastasis were studied retrospectively. RESULTS In gastric carcinoma patients with H1 metastasis who underwent a resection operation, the 6-month, 1- and 2-year post-operative survival rates were 61%, 42% and 7%. There was a statistically significant difference in survival between resected and non-resected patients (P=0.000) in gastric carcinoma cases with H2 metastasis, resection operations resulted in 54%, 16% and 8% respective survival rates, with no significant difference compared to patients not receiving a resection (P=0.132). Gastric carcinoma patients with H3 metastasis who received a resection operation showed 25%, 13% and 0% respective survivals with no significantly better prognosis compared to the non-resected cases (P=0.135). There was no statistically significant difference in survival between the cases with or without peritoneal metastasis (P=0.152). CONCLUSION A resection operation provides a better prognosis for gastric carcinoma patients with H1 metastasis independent of peritoneal metastasis, but resection has no benefit for gastric carcinoma cases with H2 or H3 metastasis. Peritoneal metastases are not the significant influencing factor for the prognosis of gastric cancer with liver metastasis.
Objective: To investigate the features of the preoperative clinicopathologic characteristics in correlation with lymph node metastasis. Methods: The preoperative clinicopathologic characteristics and lymph node metastasis of 265 patients with early gastric carcinoma were analyzed retrospectively. Results: The three clinicopathologic characteristics, maximum cancer diameter 〉2cm under endoscope, poor differentiation and excavated type were significant high risk independent preoperative clinicopathologic characteristics (P〈0.05) . The patients who had none of the three preoperative clinicopathologic characteristics had no lymph node metastasis, while 27.27% of the patients who had all the three preoperative clinicopathologic characteristics had N2 lymph node metastasis. Conclusion: The three preoperative clinicopathologic charaeteristics, maximum cancer diameter under endoscope, cell differentiation and gross type were very useful to evaluate the extent of lymph node metastasis.
OBJECTIVE To identify clinicopathological characteristics as predictive factors for lymph node metastasis in submucosal gastric cancer, and in addi- tion to establish objective criteria as indications for endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD). METHODS Data from 130 patients with submucosal gastric cancer were collected, and the relationship between their clinicopathological characteris- tics and the presence of lymph node metastasis was retrospectively analyzed by multivariate analysis. RESULTS In the multivariate logistic regression model, a tumor size of 2 cm or more and an undifferentiated histologic type were found to be inde- pendent risk clinicopathological characteristics for lymph node metastasis. Among 130 patients with submucosal carcinoma, no lymph node metastases were observed in 17 patients who showed neither of the two risk clinicopath- ological characteristics. Lymph node metastasis occurred in 61.1% (22/36) of the patients who had both risk clinicopathological characteristics. CONCLUSION A tumor size of 2 cm or more and an undifferentiated histologic type were significantly and independently related to lymph node metastasis in submucosal gastric cancer. It is rational for the paitients with neither of these two independent risk clinicopathological characteristics to undergo an ESD.
Caigang Liu Ping Lu Yang Lu Lua Li Ruishan Zhang Huimian Xu Shubao Wang Junqing Chen