## Background and Objectives: We usually use the stomach for esophageal substitution in the surgical treatment of esophageal cancer, although it is often associated with gastric cancer. In order to improve the likelihood of safe and curative surgery of esophageal cancer, we investigated the clinic
Esophageal carcinoma simultaneously associated with gastric carcinoma: Analysis of clinicopathologic features and treatments
β Scribed by Dr. Hoichi Kato; Yuji Tachimori; Hiroshi Watanabe; Shunji Mizobouchi; Hiroyasu Igaki; Hajime Yamaguchi; Atsushi Ochiai
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 559 KB
- Volume
- 56
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-4790
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β¦ Synopsis
Among 1,420 patients with thoracic esophageal carcinoma, 85 (6.1 %) had synchronous gastric carcinoma. Seventy-two patients (84.7%) underwent esophagectomy . Their operative mortality and prognosis were similar to those without gastric carcinoma. Among them, 25 patients, of whom the majority had advanced gastric carcinoma, underwent transthoracic esophagectomy with total gastrectomy (group A); eight died of esophageal cancer and four of gastric cancer. Forty-six patients, of whom the majority had gastric carcinoma in an early stage, underwent esophagectomy and esophagogastric anastomosis following partial gastrectomy or local treatment for gastric carcinoma (group B). None of the group B patients had recurrent gastric carcinoma. The operative burden was larger in group A.
The 5-year survival rate for groups A and B were 38.8% and 23.0%, respectively. Esophagectomy and esophagogastric anastomosis after limited treatment for gastric carcinoma is an adequate treatment for the majority. However, esophagectomy and total gastrectomy are recommended for patients with advanced gastric carcinoma.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The case histories of six patients are presented where the diagnosis of carcinoma of the esophagus and the stomach was made at the same time by barium studies. The clinical history was elusive in two patients. In four of the six patients, histological proof of squarnous carcinoma of the esophagus an
Clinicopathologic features and prognostic significance of duodenal invasion were studied in a retrospective study on 593 patients who underwent gastrectomy for adenocarcinoma in the antrum. The patients were grouped into three, according to the histologic extent of duodenal invasion: Group A (80 pat