We describe the case of a 70-year-old man with diabetic nephropathy undergoing hemodialysis. Four years following hemodialysis, he started taking lanthanum carbonate 1500 mg/day and lansoprazole 30 mg/day. Nine years following hemodialysis, he underwent screening esophagogastroduodenoscopy, which demonstrated the presence of the whitish cobblestone-like mucosa in the gastric corpus and multiple reddish depressed lesions with annular whitish mucosa in the antrum. With magnified narrow-band imaging endoscopy, a yellowish-white substance was observed in the villous structure, and subepithelial vessels were observed on the yellowish-white substance. Biopsies were taken from the whitish cobblestone-like mucosa of the upper corpus, a reddish depressed part of the antrum. Histologically, aggregates of cells containing amphophilic fine granular material were found in the mucosal interstitium. These cells stained positive for CD68 and were identified as histiocytes. Since he had been taking lanthanum carbonate for 5 years, we considered the possibility of histiocyte-mediated phagocytosis of lanthanum. Digital mapping via scanning electron microscopy with energy-dispersive X-ray spectrometry showed the presence of lanthanum and phosphorus in the interstitium and cytoplasm of histiocytes. The white, rough mucosa in the gastric body appeared 6 months following the commencement of lanthanum administration and still exists 3 years and 5 months after discontinuation of lanthanum.