Since the carcinomas of the cardia and the adenocarcinomas of the esophagus show many similarities in their histological and morphological descriptions, a detailed comparative study was attempted on the basis of 66 esophageal carcinomas in adenoid differentiation, 359 carcinomas of the cardia, 1288 gastric carcinomas in infracardial localisation, and 492 squamous carcinomas of the esophagus. The evaluation yielded no significant differences between the adenocarcinomas of the esophagus and the cardia neither in age and sex distribution nor with regard to the classifications of Borrmann, WHO, Ming, and Laurén, but a significant discrimination was possible between esophageal and cardial adenocarcinoma together, on the one hand, and infracardial gastric carcinoma on the other. Furthermore, esophageal adenocarcinomas were localized preferentially in the lower third, unlike squamous carcinomas of the same organ. These results suggest that esophageal adenocarcinoma and carcinoma of the cardia must be considered as one separate entity, probably originating from a common stem cell. They further suggest that the cardia belongs to the esophagus rather than to the stomach.
Using monoclonal antibody 25 F 9, which reacts with a determinant of mature macrophages, the inflammatory infiltrate of 66 gastric carcinomas was evaluated using a counting grid. The ratio tumor cells/macrophages was determined for every tumor. For a threshold value of 5, carcinomas with a better prognosis, such as the intestinal type according to Lauré, the expanding type according to Ming and the differentiated carcinomas according to the WHO had a significantly smaller relative content of 25 F 9-positive macrophages (a minimum of P less than 0.05) than the diffuse type, infiltrative type, and undifferentiated carcinomas. Furthermore, the relative macrophage content tended to increase with the stage of carcinomas spread (P less than 0.1). The results suggested that 25 F 9-positive macrophages in gastric carcinoma are of greater significance in tumor spread than in any defensive reaction against the tumor.
In a part retrospective, part prospective study, 354 carcinomas of the cardia were compared with 1259 infracardial gastric carcinomas with regard to the age and sex of the patients, macroscopic classification, microscopic classifications, depth of invasion, and survival rates. Mortality rates are generally higher in cardia carcinoma than in stomach carcinoma. The difference is due to the significantly poorer survival of cardia carcinoma patients in stage I, while mortality rates in stages II, III, and IV of both types are approximately similar. Highly significant differences were also found with regard to sex ratio, incidence of macro- and microscopic subtypes, and invasive growth. The typical cardia carcinoma occurs preferentially in men, is mostly well-delineated, and is manifested as an ulcerated or polypoid, well-differentiated tumor of expansive growth, corresponding to Laurén's intestinal type. These results confirm the concepts of McPeak and Warren, MacDonald, and Siewert et al., that the carcinoma located in the cardia must be seen as a separate entity of gastric carcinoma.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.