Publication | Open Access
Relaitonship between area of serosal invasion and prognosis in patient with gastric carcinoma
71
Citations
5
References
1987
Year
Serosal InvasionGastric SerosaSurgical OncologyGastrointestinal OncologySpatial ExtentMedicineGastroenterologyPathologyGastric CarcinomaSurgeryGastric CancerUpper Gastrointestinal SurgeryOncologyMalignant DiseaseTumor MicroenvironmentCancer Research
We examined the relationship between the spatial extent of invasion of the gastric serosa in patients with gastric carcinoma and their postoperative 5-year survival rate. At the time of surgical resection of gastric cancer, intraperitoneal free cancer cells were detected by lavage of the Douglas cavity in 135 of 309 (44%) patients with gross evidence of serosal invasion. Examination of the relationship between the presence of intraperitoneal free cancer cells and serosal area invaded by the tumor revealed that only 22% of cases with an area of serosal invasion 10 cm2 or less were positive for free cancer cells, but such cells were found in 72% of cases with an area of serosal invasion greater than 20 cm2. The 5-year survival rate was 31% in patients with an area of serosal invasion of less than 10 cm2, whereas the rate was only 8% in patients with an area of serosal invasion greater than 20 cm2. Not only the presence of serosal invasion by a tumor but also the spatial extent of the invasion are significant factors that influence the prognosis of patients with gastric carcinoma.
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