Adina Purcareanu, MD
INCIDENCE AND EPIDEMIOLOGY
The incidence and mortality for gastric cancer have
decreased significantly during the past 7 decades.
8/100.000; the 7-th cause of death from cancer
The incidence is higher depending on geographical
areas- Japan, China, Chile and Ireland.
lower social classes
age: 75% > 50 years old
Men/women=2/1
5-year survival rate is < 10-20 %
ETIOLOGY
Risk factors:
1. Enviromental
The long-term ingestion of dried, salted, smoked aliments (with high
concentrations of nitrates)
The hypothesis: The nitrates are converted to nitrites by bacteria
- Exogenous sources of bacteria (contaminated foods) have decreased through
better food preservation and refrigeration
- H. Pylori infection?
- Endogenous risk factors: - low gastric acidity
- partial gastrectomy
- atrophic gastritis/ pernicious anemia
- intestinal metaplasia
- long-term administration of H2 receptor antagonists?
- Low intake of fresh fruits and vegetables, A and C vit.; refrigeration
- Lower socioeconomic classes
- Smoking
ETIOLOGY
2. Genetic factors
- familial gastric cancer- mutation in the E-cadherine
gene
- associated with hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal
cancer
- Blood group A
- GC is three time more often within first degree
relatives
- P53 gene mutation is present in GC, even in early stages
ETIOLOGY
3. Predisposing conditions
Gastric ulcer- the cause-and-effect relationship is not
demonstrated; Duodenal ulcer-not involved
Adenomatous polyps- if they are multiple, bigger than 2
cm and have villous appearance
Menetrier ‘s disease- polypoid gastric folds
Blood group A > O
Chronic atrophic gastritis, with or without intestinal
metaplasia
Pernicious anemia
Postgastrectomy, after 15-20 years
PATHOLOGY
85%-adenocarcinomas, 15%- nonH lymphomas and
leiomyosarcomas
Adenocarcinomas
1. Intestinal- in the distal stomach, with ulcerations, preceded by
premalignant lesions
2. Diffuse - involves widespread thickening of the stomach,
especially in the cardia;
- it often affects younger patients
- the prognosis is generally worse
- this form may present as “linitis plastica”, a
nondistensible stomach with the absence of folds and narrowed
lumen; other causes are lymphoma, tuberculosis, syphilis and
amyloidosis.
PATHOLOGY
Location: - 37%- proximal third of the stomach
- 30%- antrum
- 20%- midportion of the stomach
- 13%- the entire stomach
The metastases are independent of the tumor size
PATHOLOGY
Early gastric cancer (limited to mucosa and
submucosa) classification:
I. Protrusive
II. Superficial - elevated
- flat
- depressed
III. Excavated
CLINICAL FEATURES
In early stages- no symptoms
Upper abdominal discomfort- vague initially
- postprandial fullness
- steady pain, of high intensity, sometimes with
ulcerative characteristics
Anorexia, nausea
Weight loss- late sign
Vomiting- pylorus T
Dysphagia- cardia T
CLINICAL FEATURES
Hematemesis and melena- rarely; occult bleeding- causing
anemia
Manifestations of the metastasis:
-spread by direct extension to the adjacent organs: pancreas, liver,
colon and peritoneum
-spread by lymphatics: - to the left supraclavicular lymph nodes –
Virchow’s
- to the intraabdominal lymph nodes
- metastatic nodules to the ovary (Krukenberg`s T)
- periumbilical region (Sister Mary Joseph’s node)
- T palpable on rectal or vaginal examination= Blumer ‘s T
-hematogenous spread: liver, lungs, bones
CLINICAL FEATURES
Palpable T mass: late sign
Cachexia
Rarely: - migratory thrombophlebitis
- microangiopathic hemolytic anemia
- acanthosis nigricans
DIAGNOSIS
Blood tests:
- Iron-deficiency anemia
- microangiopathic hemolytic anemia
- AST, ALT, Alkaline phosphatase (ALP), GGT- Liver
metastasis
- hypoalbuminemia- malnutrition
- CEA, CA 72-4- more useful for postoperative
monitoring
DIAGNOSIS
Double contrast radiographic examination- small
lesions and mucosal details
Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy:
-diagnoses 95-99% of GC
-useful for gastric ulcer (even with benign aspect)- with
biopsy and cytology
- screening method in Japan-the rate of cure is > 80%
for lesions limited to the mucosa or submucosa
DIAGNOSIS
Thoracic radiographs
CT- detects thoracic, abdomen and pelvic invasion
Echo-endoscopy- the depth of invasion of the stomach
wall and of the lymph nodes
Paracentesis- peritoneal carcinomatosis
SURGICAL TREATMENT
Complete resection of the T and adjacent lymph nodes
- < 1/3 of patients
Gastrectomy: - subtotal- for distal T- 20 % survival rate
- total- for proximal T + distal
pancreatectomy and splenectomy < 10 % survival rate
Limited gastric resection is palliative, for bleeding and
obstruction
Recurrencies continuing for at least 8 years after
surgery
MEDICAL TREATMENT
Fluoropyrimidine, oral, postgastrectomy- increases the 3-
year survival rate from 70% to 80%
Epirubicin + cisplatin + fluorouracil before and after
surgery increases the 5-year survival rate from 23% to 36%
for patients with resection of the gastric tumor
Fluorouracil and Leucovorin + radiation therapy increases
the survival
Trastuzumab – increases the survival for HER2 poz. GC
with aproximately 2 months
Radiation therapy – ineffective; only for palliation
(bleeding, obstruction, pain)
Jejunal or parenteral nutrition; metabolic correction
PROGNOSIS
5-year survival rate is < 10%
Prognosis factors:
- the location of the T and the involvement of the
lymph nodes; distal GC has better prognosis than the
proximal one
- the depht of the stomach wall invasion
- early GC- 50% survival rate; surgical resection may be
the cure
- mucosal location- endoscopic mucosal resection
GASTRIC LYMPHOMA
< 15 % of GC
< 2 % of lymphomas; the most frequent extranodal
location
The frequency has increased during the past 20 years
At younger patients; men> women
DIAGNOSIS
Clinically it can`t be distinguish from adenocarcinoma
Contrast radiographs- thickened folds with ulcerations
UGE with biopsy (superficial biopsies may miss the
deeper lymphoid infiltrate)
- bulky ulcerated T in the antrum or corpus
- diffuse process spreading throughout the submucosa
and even extending to the duodenum
DIAGNOSIS
AP-the majority of the lymphoid T are non-Hodgkin`s
lymphomas of B cell origin
Histologically: - well-differentiated, superficial T- MALT
(mucosa-associated lymphoma tissue)
- large-cell lymphomas
H. Pylori increases the risk for gastric lymphoma in general and
MALT lymphomas in particular
CT for the thorax, abdomen and pelvis
Bone marrow biopsy
First spread is on local lymph nodes
TREATMENT
The prognosis of the patient with gastric lymphoma after
the treatment is better than for the patient with ADK- the
importance of the differential diagnosis
H. Pylori treatment- has led to regression of 50% of the
patients with MALT lymphomas
Subtotal gastrectomy followed by chemotherapy- 5-year
survival rates of 40-60% in patients with localized high-
grade lymphomas.
It has been proposed chemotherapy alone for patients with
nodal involvement
Radiation therapy- is not defined
GASTRIC SARCOMA
1-3 % of GC
Leiomyosarcoma- the most frequent
The most frequently it affects the anterior and
posterior walls of the gastric fundus and often ulcerate
and bleed; intramural mass with a central ulceration
Clinical features- bleeding and palpable mass
Liver, pulmonary and nodal metastasis
TREATMENT
Of choice- surgical resection; 5-year survival rate of 50
%
Chemotherapy is given to patients with metastatic
disease
GIST
GI stromal tumor
Associated with C-kit gene mutation, like the acute
and chronic myeloid leukemia and Crohn’s disease
surgical resection
are unresponsive to conventional chemotherapy
50 % are responsive to imatinib(selective inhibitor of
the C-kit tyrosine kinase), like CML, or sunitinib-
increases the survival rate
Leiomyosarcomas and GISTs appear benign on
histologic examination but may behave in a malignant
fashion
-not metastasize to lymph nodes
-spread to the liver and lungs