1.Current status and progress in gastric cancer with liver metastasis.
Chinese Medical Journal 2011;124(3):445-456
OBJECTIVEThis review discusses the current status and progress in studies on gastric cancer with liver metastasis (GCLM), involving the routes, subtypes, and prognosis of GCLM; the genes and molecules associated with metastasis; the feasibility and value of each imaging modality; and current treatment options.
DATA SOURCESThe data used in this review were mainly from Medline and PubMed published in English from 2005 to August 2010. The search terms were "gastric cancer" and "liver metastasis".
STUDY SELECTIONArticles regarding the characteristics, diagnostic modalities, and various therapeutic options of GCLM were selected.
RESULTSThe prognosis of GCLM is influenced by the clinicopathological characteristics of primary tumors, as well as the presence of liver metastases. Improved understanding of related genes and molecules will lead to the development of methods of early detection and targeted therapies. For the diagnosis of GCLM, each imaging modality has its relative benefits. There remains no consensus regarding therapeutic options.
CONCLUSIONSEarly detection and characterization of liver metastases is crucial for the prognosis of gastric cancer patients. Multidisciplinary team discussions are required to design optimal treatment strategies, which should be based on the clinicopathological characteristics of each patient.
Humans ; Liver Neoplasms ; diagnosis ; drug therapy ; secondary ; surgery ; Stomach Neoplasms ; complications ; diagnosis ; drug therapy ; surgery
2.Clinical Practice Guidelines for Gastric Cancer in Korea: An Evidence-Based Approach.
Jun Haeng LEE ; Jae G KIM ; Hye Kyung JUNG ; Jung Hoon KIM ; Woo Kyoung JEONG ; Tae Joo JEON ; Joon Mee KIM ; Young Il KIM ; Keun Won RYU ; Seong Ho KONG ; Hyoung Il KIM ; Hwoon Yong JUNG ; Yong Sik KIM ; Dae Young ZANG ; Jae Yong CHO ; Joon Oh PARK ; Do Hoon LIM ; Eun Sun JUNG ; Hyeong Sik AHN ; Hyun Jung KIM
Journal of Gastric Cancer 2014;14(2):87-104
Although gastric cancer is quite common in Korea, the treatment outcome is relatively favorable compared to those in western countries. However, there are currently no Korean multidisciplinary guidelines for gastric cancer. Experts from related societies developed guidelines de novo to meet Korean circumstances and requirements, including 23 recommendation statements for diagnosis (n=9) and treatment (n=14) based on relevant key questions. The quality of the evidence was rated according to the GRADE evidence evaluation framework: the evidence levels were based on a systematic review of the literature, and the recommendation grades were classified as either strong or weak. The applicability of the guidelines was considered to meet patients' view and preferences in the context of Korea. The topics of the guidelines cover diagnostic modalities (endoscopy, endoscopic ultrasound, and radiologic diagnosis), treatment modalities (surgery, therapeutic endoscopy, chemotherapy, and radiotherapy), and pathologic evaluation. An external review of the guidelines was conducted during the finalization phase.
Diagnosis
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Drug Therapy
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Endoscopy
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Korea
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Stomach Neoplasms*
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Treatment Outcome
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Ultrasonography
3.Prognostic biomarkers and targeted therapies for gastric cancer.
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2013;16(2):193-196
Gastric cancer patients with the same clinical stage may vary greatly in prognosis, which makes the improvement of current staging-based treatment imperative. The systematic biology approaches are the solution for systematic identification of biomarkers for prognostic evaluation and targeted therapy. These markers will be applied to classify the patients by molecular traits and then to guide the individualized medication. Although HER-2 antibody is currently the only targeted drug in guideline, more drugs are now addressed in early phases of clinical trials and parts of them will be eventually approved.
Biomarkers, Tumor
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Humans
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Prognosis
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Stomach Neoplasms
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diagnosis
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drug therapy
4.Continuous infusion of 5-FU and Leucovorin mixture (LF) for metastatic gastric cancer refractory to prior 5-FU bolus regimen.
Hyun Jee KIM ; Young Jin NAM ; Young Jin YUH ; Sung Rok KIM
Korean Journal of Medicine 2002;63(2):203-208
BACKGROUND: Most patients with gastric cancer have metastatic disease at first diagnosis and need palliative chemotherapy. Unfortunately, the response duration of the first line chemotherapy is usually short and most patients need the second line therapy during their disease process. The action mechanism of continuous infusion of 5-FU is different from bolus 5-FU and we can expect that among patients who failed on bolus 5-FU, some patients will achieve response to infusional 5-FU. So, we planned to evaluate the efficacy and safety of leucovorin and infusional 5-FU as a second line regimen for the metastatic gastric cancer refractory to regimen containing bolus 5-FU. METHODS: Patients with recurred or metastatic gastric cancer unresponsive to regimen containing bolus 5-FU were entered into this study. The mixture of 5-FU 1,000 mg/m2/day and leucovorin 50 mg/m2/day was infused continuously for four days and this treatment was repeated by every three weeks. RESULTS: From March, 1996 to July 2001, 25 patients were enrolled in this study. One patient showed a partial remission, 9 stable disease and 15 progressive disease. The overall response rate was 4%. The median time to progression was 73 days and the median duration of overall survival was 140 days. Among total of 92 cycle chemotherapy, leukopenia, granulocytopenia and thrombocytopena of WHO grade 3 or 4 were observed in 7.6%, 12.0% and 14.1%, respectively. Stomatitis, nausea or vomiting of WHO grade 3 or 4 were 13.1%, 5.4%, respectively. Neutropenic infection occurred in two patients. CONCLUSION: The LF regimen was well tolerated with minimal toxicities and showed low effect as the second line chemotherapy for the patients with gastric cancer.
Agranulocytosis
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Diagnosis
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Drug Therapy
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Fluorouracil*
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Humans
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Leucovorin*
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Leukopenia
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Nausea
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Stomach
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Stomach Neoplasms*
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Stomatitis
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Vomiting
5.Survival Analysis of Gastric Cancer Patients with Incomplete Data.
Abbas MOGHIMBEIGI ; Lily TAPAK ; Ghodaratolla ROSHANAEI ; Hossein MAHJUB
Journal of Gastric Cancer 2014;14(4):259-265
PURPOSE: Survival analysis of gastric cancer patients requires knowledge about factors that affect survival time. This paper attempted to analyze the survival of patients with incomplete registered data by using imputation methods. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Three missing data imputation methods, including regression, expectation maximization algorithm, and multiple imputation (MI) using Monte Carlo Markov Chain methods, were applied to the data of cancer patients referred to the cancer institute at Imam Khomeini Hospital in Tehran in 2003 to 2008. The data included demographic variables, survival times, and censored variable of 471 patients with gastric cancer. After using imputation methods to account for missing covariate data, the data were analyzed using a Cox regression model and the results were compared. RESULTS: The mean patient survival time after diagnosis was 49.1+/-4.4 months. In the complete case analysis, which used information from 100 of the 471 patients, very wide and uninformative confidence intervals were obtained for the chemotherapy and surgery hazard ratios (HRs). However, after imputation, the maximum confidence interval widths for the chemotherapy and surgery HRs were 8.470 and 0.806, respectively. The minimum width corresponded with MI. Furthermore, the minimum Bayesian and Akaike information criteria values correlated with MI (-821.236 and -827.866, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Missing value imputation increased the estimate precision and accuracy. In addition, MI yielded better results when compared with the expectation maximization algorithm and regression simple imputation methods.
Diagnosis
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Drug Therapy
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Humans
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Markov Chains
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Proportional Hazards Models
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Stomach Neoplasms*
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Survival Analysis*
6.Current Management and Future Strategies of Gastric Cancer.
Joong Ho LEE ; Kyung Min KIM ; Jae Ho CHEONG ; Sung Hoon NOH
Yonsei Medical Journal 2012;53(2):248-257
The overall prognosis of gastric cancer has gradually improved over the past decades with growing awareness of potential carcinogens, surveillance programs and early diagnosis, as well as advances in surgical techniques and multimodality treatments. Nevertheless, the outcome of advanced stage disease still remains poor with currently available treatments, and a worldwide consensus on the standard management thereof has not been established. To improve prognosis and quality of life in gastric cancer patients, both standardization and individualization of managements are imperative. Diagnostic tests and surgical procedures need to be further sophisticated and standardized based on more recent evidences from ongoing and future randomized controlled trials, while comprehensive management should be individualized to each patient. Future challenges lie with how to optimize personalized therapies by deciphering biological complexity of gastric cancer and incorporating molecular biomarkers in clinical practice to forecast prognosis and to guide targeted therapeutics in adjunct to current standards of care.
Disease Management
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Gastrectomy
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Humans
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Lymph Node Excision
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Stomach Neoplasms/*diagnosis/drug therapy/etiology/surgery
7.Curative Resection of Inoperable, Locally Advanced Gastric Cancer after Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy with Taxotere and Cisplatin.
Han Hong LEE ; Hoon HUR ; Byung Joo CHAE ; Wook KIM ; Hae Myung JEON
Journal of the Korean Gastric Cancer Association 2005;5(1):57-64
At diagnosis, the majority of patients with gastric cancer are found to have local invasion or distant organ metastasis, even though the sole measure for a complete cure is a curative resection. A curative resection is hardly applicable for those with invasion and metastasis; thus, trials with neoadjuvant chemotherapy for downstaging the cancer should be considered. Docetaxel is a semisynthetic taxane that promotes tubulin polymerization and inhibits microtubule depolymerization. In recent studies, many metastatic gastric cancers were treated using neoadjuvant chemotherapy with docetaxel, and the response rates were reported. We report here two cases of locally advanced, non-resectable gastric cancer that were candidates for a curative resection after induction chemotherapy with docetaxel and cisplatin.
Cisplatin*
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Diagnosis
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Drug Therapy*
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Humans
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Induction Chemotherapy
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Microtubules
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Neoplasm Metastasis
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Polymerization
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Polymers
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Stomach Neoplasms*
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Tubulin
8.A Clinicopathological Analysis of Recurrent Gastric Cancer.
Han Kwang YANG ; Sam Je CHO ; Ki Wook CHUNG ; Yoon Ho KIM ; Hyeon Kook LEE ; Kuhn Uk LEE ; Kuk Jin CHOE ; Jin Pok KIM
Cancer Research and Treatment 2001;33(3):207-215
PURPOSE: This study was designed to investigate the correlation between the clinicopathologic characteristics and the recurrence pattern of gastric cancer and to define survival difference according to treatment modality after diagnosis of recurrence. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the medical records of 4184 patients who had undergone radical surgery for primary gastric cancer from 1986 through 1996. Clinicopathologic factors were analyzed for the relationship of each factor with the pattern of recurrence. And the survival after diagnosis of recurrence was compared among the treatment modalities. RESULTS: Recurrence pattern was confirmed in 1141 patients. Loco-regional recurrence occurred in 291 patients (20.1%), peritoneal recurrence in 383 (26.5%), distant recurrence in 290 (20.1%), and mixed recurrence in 177 (12.3%), respectively. Early recurrence (less than 2 years) occurred in 767 (69.3%), intermediate recurrence (2~5 years) in 286 (25.8%), and late recurrence (more than 5 years) in 54 (4.9%). In multivariate analysis, T stage, N stage, size of tumor and perineural invasion were independent prognostic factors for recurrence. Median survival from diagnosis of recurrence was 24.2 months in the curative operation group, 7.7 months in the chemotherapy group, 7.1 months in the non-curative operation group and 3.3 months in the conservative treatment group, respectively (p=0.000). CONCLUSION: The clinicopathological analysis of recurrent gastric cancer showed recurrent patterns and prognostic factors. Curative resection is suggested to have survival benefit in recurrent gastric cancer patients, although it was possible in patients with limited extent of disease.
Diagnosis
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Drug Therapy
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Humans
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Medical Records
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Multivariate Analysis
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Recurrence
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Retrospective Studies
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Stomach Neoplasms*
9.Gastric Carcinoma with Bone Marrow Metastasis: A Case Series.
Ahmet Siyar EKINCI ; Oznur BAL ; Tahsin OZATLI ; Ibrahim TURKER ; Onur ESBAH ; Ayse DEMIRCI ; Burcin BUDAKOGLU ; Ulku Yalcintas ARSLAN ; Emrah ERASLAN ; Berna OKSUZOGLU
Journal of Gastric Cancer 2014;14(1):54-57
Gastric cancer is a major cause of cancer-related mortality. At the time of diagnosis, majority of the patients usually have unresectable or metastatic disease. The most common sites of metastases are the liver and the peritoneum, but in the advanced stages, there may be metastases to any region of the body. Bone marrow is an important metastatic site for solid tumors, and the prognosis in such cases is poor. In gastric cancer cases, bone marrow metastasis is usually observed in younger patients and in those with poorly differentiated tumors. Prognosis is worsened owing to the poor histomorphology as well as the occurrence of pancytopenia. The effect of standard chemotherapy is unknown, as survival is limited to a few weeks. This report aimed to evaluate 5 gastric cancer patients with bone marrow metastases to emphasize the importance of this condition.
Bone Marrow*
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Diagnosis
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Drug Therapy
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Humans
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Liver
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Mortality
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Neoplasm Metastasis*
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Pancytopenia
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Peritoneum
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Prognosis
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Stomach Neoplasms
10.Clinical Application of Circulating Tumor Cells in Gastric Cancer
Moon Won LEE ; Gwang Ha KIM ; Hye Kyung JEON ; Su Jin PARK
Gut and Liver 2019;13(4):394-401
Early detection and accurate monitoring of cancer is important for improving clinical outcomes. Endoscopic biopsy and/or surgical resection specimens are the gold standard for diagnosing gastric cancer and are also useful for selecting therapeutic strategies based on the analysis of genomic/immune parameters. However, these approaches cannot be easily performed because of their invasiveness and because these specimens do not always reflect tumor dynamics and drug sensitivities during therapeutic processes, especially chemotherapy. Accordingly, many researchers have tried to develop noninvasive novel biomarkers that can monitor real-time tumor dynamics for early diagnosis, prognostic evaluation, and prediction of recurrence and therapeutic efficacy. Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are metastatic cells that are released from the primary tumors into the blood stream and comprise a crucial step in hematogenous metastasis. CTCs, as a liquid biopsy, have received a considerable amount of attention from researchers since they are easily accessible in peripheral blood, avoiding the invasiveness associated with traditional biopsy techniques; they can also be used to derive clinical information for monitoring disease status. In this review, with respect to CTCs, we summarize the metastatic cascade, detection methods, clinical applications, and prospects for patients with gastric cancer.
Biomarkers
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Biopsy
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Drug Therapy
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Early Diagnosis
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Humans
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Neoplasm Metastasis
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Neoplastic Cells, Circulating
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Recurrence
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Rivers
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Stomach Neoplasms