Proximal gastrectomy maintains comparable oncological radicality to TG and is preferred over TG in terms of preventing postoperative anemia. However, periodic endoscopic follow-up is necessary to monitor the upper gastrointestinal tract.
Background In the preoperative evaluation for gastric cancer, high-resolution endoscopic technologies allow us to detect small accessory lesions. However, it is not known if the gastric remnant after partial gastrectomy for synchronous multiple gastric cancers has a greater risk for metachronous cancer. The purpose of this study was to determine the incidence of metachronous cancer in this patient subset compared with that after solitary cancer surgery. Methods Data on a consecutive series of 1,281 patients gastrectomized for early gastric cancer from 1991 to 2007 were analyzed retrospectively. The 715 gastric remnants after distal gastrectomy were periodically surveyed by endoscopic examination in Shikoku Cancer Center. Among those surveyed cases, 642 patients were pathologically diagnosed with solitary lesion (SO group) and 73 patients with synchronous multiple lesions (MU group) at the time of the initial surgery. Results In the follow-up period, 15 patients in the SO group and 3 patients in the MU group were diagnosed as having metachronous cancer in the gastric remnant. The cumulative 4-year incidence rate was 1.9 % in the SO group and 5.5 % in the MU group. The difference did not reach the significant level by the log-rank test.
ConclusionsThe incidence of metachronous cancer is higher after multiple cancer surgery; however, the difference is not statistically significant.
Inhaled corticosteroids, being noninvasive and relatively safe, appear to be a possible therapeutic option in inflammatory bronchial polyps, especially in cases where the patient has asthma as an underlying condition, or the polyps are small and their management is not urgent.
Primary non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) of the common bile duct (CBD) manifesting as obstructive jaundice is extremely rare: to our knowledge, only 22 cases of primary NHL arising from the CBD have been reported. The patient in this case report was a 63-year-old man who presented with obstructive jaundice. Abdominal sonography, positron emission tomography, and computed tomography showed a mass with abnormal 18-fluorodeoxyglucose uptake in pancreatic head. Magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography demonstrated a strictured segment of the CBD with proximal bile duct dilatation. We performed pancreaticoduodenectomy for a presumptive diagnosis of pancreatic head carcinoma or cholangiocarcinoma of the CBD. However, the histological diagnosis was a primary, diffuse, large B-cell lymphoma of the CBD. He received three courses of combination chemotherapy, including rituximab, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone (R-CHOP). The patient remains well, without evidence of tumor recurrence, 8 months after surgery. In summary, primary NHL of the CBD, despite its rarity, should be considered in the differential diagnosis of obstructive jaundice. An accurate histopathologic diagnosis and complete surgical resection, followed by combination chemotherapy plus rituximab may be effective.
The findings show a relatively high incidence of positive surgical margin, local recurrence, and gastric remnant cancer after LWR. Although LWR can be performed for properly selected patients, periodic postoperative endoscopic examination is necessary to detect metachronous multiple gastric cancer and local recurrences.
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