Determinants of prognosis after hepatic resection for metastasis from gastric cancer were studied in a retrospective series of 21 patients, including four who survived more than 5 years after surgery. All patients underwent apparently curative resection. Synchronous or metachronous resection, age, sex, histological type, depth of invasion, lymphatic and venous invasion, lymph node involvement and number of hepatic metastases were analysed as prognostic factors for survival. Serosal invasion was the only significant determinant at synchronous resection. Both lymphatic and venous invasion were significant prognostic factors available after histological examination. Combined analysis of these two histological variables revealed that patients positive for both were at a significantly higher risk for both overall and disease-free survival. It is suggested that hepatic resection should be attempted in patients with synchronous or metachronous metastases if there is no serosal invasion by the primary gastric tumour, and if the primary tumour has neither venous nor lymphatic invasion in the case of metachronous metastases.
We herein present the case of a 50-year-old woman with malignant fibrous histiocytoma arising from the descending colon and localizing in the colonic wall. Malignant fibrous histiocytoma of the large bowel is a very rare tumor. A total of 18 cases, including our case, have been reported in the world medical literature so far and we also reviewed these cases. In our case, combined adjuvant chemotherapy was administered after a complete resection had been performed. No clinical signs of local recurrence or distant metastasis were found at 7 years after the operation.
We report a case of gastric invasive micropapillary carcinoma (IMPC) in an 86-year-old female patient. She was admitted to our hospital with a chief complaint of bloody emesis. Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy found a gastric adenocarcinoma at the antrum. The biopsy specimens showed moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma with invasive small tumor nests. Distal gastrectomy with systematic lymph node dissection demonstrated that the tumor had IMPC through a pathological examination. Despite the depth of tumor invasion (the submucosa), extensive lymph node metastases were observed. Anti-D2-40 immunostaining revealed numerous infiltrating tumor cell nests in the lymphatic vessels, which could explain subsequent multiple lymph node metastases. The adenocarcinoma showed intestinal phenotypes by several immunohistochemical studies. One of these antibodies (CD10) clearly demonstrated the inverted apical-basal (inside-out) pattern of IMPC, whereas it showed an ordinary pattern in intestinal metaplasia adjacent to the tumor. Furthermore, genetic analysis by direct sequencing revealed a point mutation in the exon 5 of TP53 in the tumor. The mutation presumably harbors a missense mutation from Arg to His at the codon 175 (R175H). R175H has been previously described as a ‘gain-of-function' mutation with a high invasive or metastatic potential in several types of cancers. In summary, this is one of the first reported cases of gastric IMPC with intestinal phenotypes harboring a TP53 R175H mutation in the literature.
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