Publication | Open Access
Pathological Complete Response and Two-year Disease-free Survival in a Primary Gastric Choriocarcinoma Patient with Advanced Liver Metastases Treated with Germ Cell Tumor-based Chemotherapy: A Case Report
15
Citations
9
References
2012
Year
Primary Gastric ChoriocarcinomaSurgical OncologyTwo-year Disease-free SurvivalHepatologyInvasive TumorGastrointestinal OncologyMedicineHepatobiliary TumorBiliary CancerGastroenterologyPathologyPathological Complete ResponsePoor PrognosisLiver CancerOncologyRadiation OncologyCancer ResearchCase Report
Choriocarcinoma is an early metastasizing and highly invasive tumor and characterized as a high-level human chorionic gonadotropin-secreting tumor. It normally arises in the gestational trophoblast, gonads and much less frequently in the stomach. Primary gastric choriocarcinoma appears to have a poor prognosis; especially with liver metastasis, the survival period is expected to be <1 month. This unfavorable clinical outcome is partly due to the lack of defined chemotherapy against primary gastric choriocarcinoma. We herein report a case of a 68-year-old male primary gastric choriocarcinoma patient with advanced liver metastases in which germ cell tumor-based chemotherapy achieved a pathological complete response and 2-year disease-free survival.
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