1.Acquired Omental Cystic Lymphangioma after Subtotal Gastrectomy: A Case Report.
Jong Han KIM ; Woo Sang RYU ; Byung Wook MIN ; Tae Jin SONG ; Gil Soo SON ; Seung Joo KIM ; Young Sik KIM ; Jun Won UM
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2009;24(6):1212-1215
We herein describe a case of cystic lymphangioma in the greater omentum of the remnant stomach, which is thought it to be related with subtotal gastrectomy 10 yr ago for early gastric cancer. A 76-yr-old man was admitted to our department with postprandial abdominal discomfort and bowel habit change. Intraabdominal multilocular cystic mass was detected by ultrasonography and computed tomography. We performed a complete En-bloc tumor resection including spleen and distal pancreas, and histological examination confirmed cystic lymphangioma originated from the greater omentum of the remnant stomach. Although the etiology of omental lymphangioma remains largely unclear, these findings suggested strongly that obstruction of the lymphatic vessels after gastric resection for gastric carcinoma might be the most plausible cause. The surgical extirpation with resection of organs involved appears to be a treatment of choice for such unusual case.
Aged
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*Gastrectomy
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Gastric Stump/*pathology
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Humans
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Lymphangioma, Cystic/*pathology
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Male
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Omentum/*pathology
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Stomach Neoplasms/surgery
2.Diagnosis and minimally invasive treatment of gastric remnant cancer.
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2013;16(2):132-134
Gastric remnant cancer (GRC) is defined as cancer in the remnant stomach after partial gastrectomy. The incidence of GRC is rising in recent years. The carcinogenesis, development, and metastasis of GRC are different from primary gastric cancer. The early detection of GRC should be based on rational surveillance of patients following gastrectomy. For early stage GRC, endoscopic resection is one of the safe and effective methods. For advanced GRC, the primary treatment alternative is surgical resection. Minimally invasive procedures such as laparoscopic exploration, laparoscopic-assisted resection of GRC are still safe choices for experienced surgeons.
Gastrectomy
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methods
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Gastric Stump
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pathology
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surgery
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Humans
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Laparoscopy
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methods
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Stomach Neoplasms
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diagnosis
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pathology
;
surgery
3.Pylorus-preserving gastrectomy in treating middle-third early gastric cancer.
Jin ZHOU ; Yunliang WANG ; Xingguo ZHU ; Dechun LI
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2016;19(2):238-240
Compared with distal gastrectomy, pylorus-preserving gastrectomy is less invasive which can decrease incidence of dumping syndrome, diarrhea and body weight lost, cholecystitis and gallstone, reflux gastritis and esophagitis and remnant gastric cancer. Based on new Japanese Gastric Cancer Treatment Guideline and new progression in the world, we give a review mainly basic characteristics, indications, operation details and short- and long-time outcomes after pylorus-preserving gastrectomy.
Gastrectomy
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methods
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Gastric Stump
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pathology
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Gastroenterostomy
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Humans
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Organ Sparing Treatments
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Pylorus
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surgery
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Stomach Neoplasms
;
surgery
4.Progress and controversy on diagnosis and treatment of gastric stump cancer.
Zhidong GAO ; Yongbai LI ; Kewei JIANG ; Yingjiang YE ; Shan WANG
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2018;21(5):588-592
Gastric stump cancer (GSC) is a carcinoma arising from the remnant stomach following gastric surgery for benign or malignant disease, and is more common in men. The risk of morbidity has an obvious time dependence. GSC incidence is likely to rise with lengthening of the initial operation interval. The GSC time interval after malignant disease is significantly shorter than that of benign disease. GSC etiologies mainly include duodenogastric reflux and denervation of the gastric mucosa resulting in the change of the gastric environment after gastrectomy and the Helicobacter pylori infection. Due to atypical clinical symptoms, GSC is always identified at an advanced stage and the long-term survival rate is low. An optimal endoscopic surveillance system is essential to improve early detection rates. Treatments in GSC and primary gastric cancer are the same and include resection of the lesion and radical lymph node dissection. R0 resection is an important prognostic factor. Here we review previous reports with respect to epidemiological characteristics, etiology, clinical symptoms, treatment, and prognosis of GSC.
Gastrectomy
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Gastric Stump
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pathology
;
surgery
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Helicobacter Infections
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complications
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Humans
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Lymph Node Excision
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Male
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Stomach Neoplasms
;
surgery
5.Advertent problems about gastric stump cancer surgery.
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2018;21(5):502-506
Due to different disease background of gastric stump cancer(GSC) patients (benign or malignant lesion, reconstruction of digestive tract, etc.), the GSC surgical procedure and the difficulty of lymphadenectomy are also different. The extent of radical lymphadenectomy for gastric stump cancer should extend beyond D2 lymphadenectomy, according to the different backgrounds of initial disease, reconstructions, and tumor location. A lymphadenectomy should include the lymph nodes in anterior (No.17) and posterior (No.13) surface of the pancreatic head, along the superior mesenteric vein (No.14v), jejunal mesenteric lymph nodes, the splenic hilum (No.10), infra-diaphragm (No.19), esophageal hiatus of the diaphragm(No.20), para-esophageal nodes in the lower thorax (No.110) and supra-diaphragm (No.111). To achieve R0 resection, combined adjacent organ (transverse colon and spleen) resection is necessary in some cases. The indication for endoscopic submucosal dissection of early remnant gastric cancer is similar to primary early gastric cancer in selected patients. The advantages of laparoscopic and robot-assisted surgery for early remnant gastric cancer need to be confirmed through multicenter studies. Compared with primary proximal gastric cancer, remnant gastric cancer showed an equivalent survival rate. Roux-en-Y is the first choice for digestive tract reconstruction.
Anastomosis, Roux-en-Y
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Gastrectomy
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Gastric Stump
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pathology
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surgery
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Humans
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Lymph Node Excision
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Stomach Neoplasms
;
surgery
6.Interpretation on Chinese surgeons' consensus opinion for the definition of gastric stump cancer (version 2018).
Zhidong GAO ; Kewei JIANG ; Yingjiang YE ; Shan WANG
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2018;21(5):486-490
Gastric stump cancer(GSC) is defined as newly developed remnant stomach cancer following gastrectomy. This definition initially referred to carcinoma detected in the remnant stomach more than 5 years after the primary surgery for a benign disease. Subsequently, this timeframe was extended to 10 years after the primary surgery for a malignant disease. Recently, the concept of "carcinoma in the remnant stomach(CRS)" proposed by the Japanese Gastric Cancer Association was introduced in China. The new definition encompasses all carcinomas arising in the remnant stomach following gastrectomy, irrespective of the histology of the primary lesion, extent of resection, or reconstruction method. It includes all carcinoma types that have developed in the remnant stomach, such as newly developed cancer, recurrent cancer, remaining cancer, and multiple cancers. Considering the current diagnosis and treatment status of gastric cancer in China, if CRS is to be used as a direct equivalent to GSC in clinical practice, confusion may arise concerning disease identification and diagnosis. Following several discussion rounds, a meta-analysis of the literatures at home and abroad, and a multicenter national retrospective study with a large sample population, the "Chinese surgeons' consensus opinion for the definition of gastric stump cancer (version 2018)" was completed. By reviewing the detailed evidence-based medicine supporting the consensus document, this paper aims to assist clinical diagnosis and enhance future academic exchange.
China
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Consensus
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Gastrectomy
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Gastric Stump
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pathology
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surgery
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Humans
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Neoplasm Recurrence, Local
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Retrospective Studies
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Stomach Neoplasms
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surgery
7.Study on the clinicopathological characteristics and pattern of lymph node metastasis in patients with gastric remnant cancer.
Wu SONG ; Yu-long HE ; Shi-rong CAI ; Chang-hua ZHANG ; Dong-jie YANG ; Xin-ming SONG ; Zhao WANG ; Wen-hua ZHAN
Chinese Journal of Surgery 2009;47(24):1860-1863
OBJECTIVETo investigate clinicopathological characteristics and the pattern of lymph node metastasis of patients with gastric remnant cancer.
METHODSThe data of the clinicopathological characteristics and the pattern of lymph node metastasis in 56 patients with gastric remnant cancer treated from March 1994 to December 2008 was investigated and compared with those in 1171 patients with primary gastric cancer treated over the same period.
RESULTSFifty-six patients (4.6%) with gastric remnant cancer were enrolled in this study during the period. Compared with patients with primary gastric cancer, the age of cancer onset was older [(64.3+/-9.0) vs. (58.3+/-12.6) yrs], lymph node metastasis rate was higher (31.8% vs. 25.5%), Borrmann's classification was later and neighbor organ resection rate was higher (57.1% vs. 26.4%) in patients with gastric remnant cancer; the differences were all significant (chi2=18.800, 11.679, 9.177, 25.190; P<0.05). Patients with gastric remnant cancer who underwent lymph node dissection tended to have a higher incidence of No.10 (splenic hilar lymph node) and No.11 (splenic artery lymph node) group lymph node metastasis than those in primary gastric cancer (chi2=5.558, 6.099; P<0.05). In contrast, patients with primary gastric cancer had a higher incidence of No. 2 (left cardiac lymph node), No.3 (lesser curvature lymph node) and No.8 (common hepatic artery lymph node) group lymph node metastasis than those in gastric remnant cancer (chi2=15.508, 6.003, 4.084; P<0.05). The jejunal mesentery lymph node metastasis was 24.0% (6/25) in patients with gastric remnant cancer and the peripheral connective tissue infiltration rate was 14.3% (8/56).
CONCLUSIONSIt suggested that patients with gastric remnant cancer has different clinicopathologic characteristics and the pattern of lymph node metastasis from those with primary gastric cancer. D2 lymph node dissection of proximate gastric cancer and jejunal mesentery lymph node dissection should be the standard operation for these patients; but combined neighboring organ resection should be taken into consideration.
Age of Onset ; Aged ; Female ; Gastric Stump ; Humans ; Lymph Nodes ; pathology ; Lymphatic Metastasis ; pathology ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Stomach Neoplasms ; pathology ; surgery
8.A Case of Stump MALT Lymphoma after Partial Gastrectomy.
Sun Young CHOI ; Joung Il LEE ; Tae June NOH ; Jae Young JANG ; Ki Deuk NAM ; Nam Hoon KIM ; Sang Kil LEE ; Kwang Ro JOO ; Seok Ho DONG ; Hyo Jong KIM ; Byung Ho KIM ; Young Woon CHANG ; Rin CHANG
The Korean Journal of Gastroenterology 2006;47(5):394-396
Gastrectomy is known to be a risk factor for adenocarcinoma in remnant stomach. It is suggested that reflux of bile juice or duodenal secretion to remnant stomach induces atrophic gastritis, intestinal metaplasia, and gastric adenocarcinoma. Malignant lymphoma in remnant stomach after gastrectomy is very rare. Only about thirty cases are reported in the world, and there is no case report in Korea. Gastric MALT (mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue) lymphoma is associated with Helicobacter pylori infection but the mechanism of lymphoma development in remnant stomach is still unknown. We report a case of low grade gastric MALT lymphoma of gastric stump after 10 years from partial gastrectomy.
Aged
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*Gastrectomy
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*Gastric Stump
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Humans
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*Lymphoma, B-Cell, Marginal Zone/pathology
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Male
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*Neoplasms, Second Primary
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Stomach Neoplasms/pathology/*surgery
9.A retrospective analysis of clinicopathological characteristics and prognostic factors of gastric stump cancer.
Fang-xuan LI ; Ru-peng ZHANG ; Jing-zhu ZHAO ; Gang WANG
Chinese Journal of Surgery 2011;49(3):204-207
OBJECTIVETo explore the clinicopathological characteristics and prognostic factors of gastric stump cancer(GSC).
METHODSThe clinical data of 138 patients with GSC treated from January 1992 to July 2008 were reviewed and analyzed. The patients included 122 males and 16 females with a mean age of 61.5 years, and the mean interval between the initial operation and second diagnosis was 21.9 years.
RESULTSThe endoscopy and pathological examination showed Borrmann III/IV in 127 (92.7%) patients and undifferentiated carcinoma in 115 (83.3%) patients. The resectability and radical resectability rate were 72.4% and 59.4%. The 1-, 3- and 5-year survival rates was 59.2%, 30.1% and 14.2%, respectively. The median overall survival time was 19.4 months. Univariate Log-rank test indicated that Borrmann type, histological type, tumor diameter, TNM stage, depth of invasion, number of metastatic lymph node, distant metastasis and option of treatment were significant prognostic factors for GSC. While TNM stage, depth of invasion, distant metastasis and option of treatment were prognostic factors on multivariable analysis. The median survival time of patients underwent radical resection was significantly longer (36 months) than that of patients received palliative resection (8 months, P < 0.05) and chemotherapy only (5 months, P < 0.05). Among patients with a tumor of T4 stage, the median survival time was statistically prolonged by combined evisceration (18.6 months) when compared with the patients received palliative surgery.
CONCLUSIONSTNM stage, depth of invasion, distant metastasis and option of treatment are independent prognostic factors for GSC. Early diagnosis and radical resection may play an important role in improving the prognosis of GSC.
Female ; Follow-Up Studies ; Gastric Stump ; Humans ; Kaplan-Meier Estimate ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Prognosis ; Retrospective Studies ; Stomach Neoplasms ; pathology
10.Meta-analysis of gastric stump cancer after gastrectomy for gastric cancer.
Yongbai LI ; Zhidong GAO ; Xuesong ZHAO ; Bo WANG ; Yingjiang YE ; Shan WANG ; Kewei JIANG
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2018;21(5):569-577
OBJECTIVETo study the clinicopathological features and prognosis of gastric stump cancer (GSC) following subtotal gastrectomy for gastric cancer, to compare the clinicopathologic differences between narrow GSC and generalized GSC, and to compare the prognosis between GSC and primary proximal gastric cancer (PPGC) after radical resection.
METHODSLiteratures of GSC-associated clinical study were searched by computer from the Cochrane Library, Medline, PubMed, CNKI, Wanfang and VIP databases, and the retrieval period was from the establishment of database to December 31, 2017.
INCLUSION CRITERIA(1) GSC was defined as a carcinoma arising in the gastric remnant after radical gastrectomy for gastric cancer, and confirmed by the pathological or histological examination, the elapsed time from the initial operation was not considered in the definition. (2) Retrospective or prospective clinical cohort study. (3) Study included at least one of below items: gender, anastomotic type in gastric cancer surgery, the interval between the initial surgery and diagnosis of GSC, the location, treatment, pathological differentiation, pathologic stage, lymph node metastasis rate and prognosis of GSC. (4) When similar studies were reported by the same institution or author, either the better quality study or the newest publication was chosen.
EXCLUSION CRITERIA(1) Abstracts, reviews, case reports, meeting record, editorials and repeated research. (2) Studies including patients with initial non-gastric cancer. In this study, gastric stump cancer(GSC) after gastric cancer was divided into two groups: the incidence without limit interval time (generalized GSC group) and above 10 years (narrow GSC group). Selective trials were Meta-analyzed by the Stata13.0 software and statistical analysis was performed using SPSS 21.0 software.
RESULTSA total of 27 literatures were finally enrolled, which comprised 1463 GSC patients, including 1146 males and 317 females. The generalized group and narrow GSC group had 921 and 542 patients respectively. The generalized GSC group and the narrow GSC group did not significantly differ in terms of previous reconstruction mode, types of differentiation, pathologic T staging, postoperative pathology tumor-node-metastases staging, and distant metastasis rate (χ=2.341, 0.926, 0.350, 0.965, 2.311 respectively, all P>0.05). As compared to generalized GSC group, narrow GSC group had higher ratio of male patients (82.8% vs. 75.7%, χ=9.909, P=0.002), more lesions locating in anastomotic stoma (37.8% vs. 26.1%, χ=18.091, P=0.000), higher ratio of patients undergoing radical resection (84.2% vs. 70.3%, χ=11.738, P=0.001), higher positive rate of postoperative lymph node (45.8% vs. 34.5%, χ=6.319, P=0.012), and larger size of tumor [(5.9±2.2) cm vs. (4.5±1.9) cm, t=9.151, P=0.000]. The overall 5-year survival rate and postoperative pathology stage III(-IIII( survival ratio in narrow GSC group were higher compared to general GSC group (42.7% vs. 30.6% and 27.5% vs. 18.1%, respectively), which were significantly different (χ=10.938, P=0.000; χ=4.128, P=0.042), while the postoperative pathology stage I(-II( survival ratio was not significantly different between two groups (67.3% vs. 67.0% respectively, χ=0.015, P=0.92). There was no significant difference in the 5-year survival rate between GSC with radical resection and PPGC(RR=1.04, 95%CI:0.79-1.36, P=0.805) and the 5-year survival rate of same postoperative pathology stage was not significantly different between two groups (I(-II( stage: RR=1.08, 95%CI:0.93-1.26, P=0.328; III(-IIII( stage: RR=0.59, 95%CI:0.33-1.04, P=0.111).
CONCLUSIONSThere are some different clinicopathological features between the generalized and the narrow GSC after gastric cancer surgery. The prognosis of GSC after radical resection is similar to primary proximal gastric cancer.
Female ; Gastrectomy ; Gastric Stump ; pathology ; surgery ; Humans ; Male ; Neoplasm Staging ; Prognosis ; Prospective Studies ; Retrospective Studies ; Stomach Neoplasms ; surgery ; Survival Rate