Analysis of clinicopathological characteristics and prognosis on 42 patients with primary gastric adenosquamous cell carcinoma.
- Author:
Bin LI
1
,
2
,
3
;
Lin SUN
4
;
Xiaona WANG
1
;
Jingyu DENG
1
;
Xuewei DING
1
;
Xuejun WANG
1
;
Bin KE
1
;
Li ZHANG
1
;
Rupeng ZHANG
1
;
Han LIANG
1
;
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH: Adenocarcinoma; diagnosis; mortality; pathology; therapy; Aged; Carcinoma, Squamous Cell; diagnosis; mortality; pathology; therapy; Chemotherapy, Adjuvant; statistics & numerical data; Female; Gastrectomy; methods; statistics & numerical data; Humans; Lymph Node Excision; statistics & numerical data; Lymphatic Metastasis; Male; Middle Aged; Multivariate Analysis; Neoplasm Grading; statistics & numerical data; Neoplasm Invasiveness; pathology; Neoplasm Staging; statistics & numerical data; Prognosis; Proportional Hazards Models; Retrospective Studies; Stomach Neoplasms; diagnosis; mortality; pathology; therapy; Survival Rate
- From: Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2017;20(2):207-212
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVETo investigate the clinicopathological characteristics, diagnosis, treatment and prognosis of patients with primary gastric adenosquamous cell carcinoma.
METHODSA total of 5 562 patients with gastric neoplasm were admitted in Tianjin Medical University Cancer Institute and Hospital from January 2001 to January 2011. Among them 42 patients were diagnosed as primary gastric adenosquamous cell carcinoma, accounting for 0.76% of all the patients. The clinicopathological and follow-up data of these 42 patients with primary gastric adenosquamous cell carcinoma were retrospectively analyzed, and Cox proportional hazard model was used to analyze the prognostic factors of gastric adenocarcinoma squamous cell carcinoma.
RESULTSAmong above 42 patients, 32 were male and 10 were female, with a male-to-female ratio of 3.2/1.0 and the average age was 63 years (range: 46 to 77 years). Five patients (11.9%) were confirmed as adenosquamous cell carcinoma by preoperative pathological examination, while other 37 patients were diagnosed as adenocarcinoma preoperatively. According to the 7th edition AJCC TNM classification system for gastric adenocarcinoma, 5 patients (11.9%) were in stage II(, 30 patients (71.4%) in stage III( and 7 patients (16.7%) in stage IIII(. The maximum tumor diameter was > 5 cm in 18 patients (42.9%). Borrmann type III(-IIII( was found in 29 patients (69.0%), and poorly differentiated (or undifferentiated) tumor was found in 32 patients (76.2%). Radical operations were performed in 31 patients (73.8%), the reasons of non radical operations included infiltration of pancreas in 3 patients, infiltration of radices mesocili transvers in 1 patient and classification of stage IIII( in 7 patients. Lymph node dissection was performed in 37 patients, 83.8% of them (31/37) was found with lymphatic metastases. Twenty-five patients received adjuvant chemotherapy except for 7 patients in stage IIII( and 10 patients who refused adjuvant chemotherapy. All the patients had an average survival time of 36.4 months and median survival time of 28.0 months, and the overall 1-, 3- and 5-year survival rates were 82.2%, 42.3% and 18.2% respectively. Univariate analysis revealed that tumor size (χ=4.039, P=0.044), Borrmann type (χ=18.728, P=0.000), tumor differentiation (χ=19.612, P=0.000), radical gastectomy (χ=41.452, P=0.000), lymph node metastasis (χ=9.689, P=0.002) and clinical stage (χ=26.277, P=0.000) were associated with postoperative survival. Multivariate analysis revealed that tumor differentiation (HR=10.560, 95%CI:2.263-49.281, P=0.003), radical gastrectomy (HR=4.309, 95%CI:1.311-14.168, P=0.016) and clinical stage (HR=2.392, 95%CI:1.022-5.600, P=0.044) were independent prognosis factors.
CONCLUSIONSPrimary gastric adenosquamous cell carcinoma is rare with poor prognosis. Radical gastrectomy is recommended. Tumor differentiation, radical gastrectomy and clinical stage are important indicators to evaluate prognosis of primary gastric adenosquamous cell carcinoma.