- MC in Japan. MC in males
- H.pylori > inflammation > gastritis > gastric atrophy > gastric carcinoma
Aetiology
- Diet – high salt, smoked food, preservatives containing nitrites
- Familial – associated with e-cadherin mutation
- Inactivation of p53, over expression of GFs, bcl-2 gene mutation
- HNPCC (Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer)
- Gastric polyps
- Pernicious anaemia
- Chronic gastritis – type A (proximal gastric ca). type B (distal gastric ca)
- Resection of stomach – decreased H+ sec > gastric atrophy, which is a PF
Pathology
- Gross types
- Cauliflower type
- Ulcerative type
- Leather-bottle (Linitis plastica)
- Lauren’s classification
- Intestinal type – favourable prognosis
- Polypoid and superficial types are intestinal varieties – MCC is H.pylori
- Gland formation and definite cellular architecture
- Gastric mucosa replaced with epithelial that resembles small int. mucosa
- MC in men and elderly; hematogenous spread, p53 inactivation
- Diffuse type – poor prognosis
- MC in blood group A, familial type, young people and females
- Poorly differentiated, signet type. Early gastric wall penetration and lymphatic spread
- Linitis plastica, ulcerative growth
- Intestinal type – favourable prognosis
- Depending on depth of invasion
- Early gastric ca – Japanese Classification (see pic)
- Involvement of mucosa and/or submucosa only with or without LN involvement
- T1 + any N
- Advanced gastric ca – Borrmann’s classification
- Involvement of muscularis and/or serosa with or without involvement of LNs
- Early gastric ca – Japanese Classification (see pic)
- WHO histological classification
- Adenocarcinoma (from mucous secreting cells)
- Adenosquamous carcinoma
- Squamous cell carcinoma
- Undifferentiated carcinoma
Spread
- Direct spread
- Horizontal submucosal spread along stomach wall
- Vertical spread by invasion to adjacent structures – pancreas, colon, liver
- Lymphatic spread
- Occurs by permeation and embolisation through lymphatics
- And later to LEFT SUPRACLAVICULAR LNs (Virchow’s LN – Troisier’s sign)
- Haematogenous spread
- MC to liver – causes multiple liver secondaries which present as multiple hard nodules with central necrosis
- Later to lungs and bones
- Transperitoneal spread
- Can cause peritoneal seedings – leads to ascites
- Can cause Krukenberg’s tumours in ovaries (may show Bloomers shelf – seen on rectal exam)
Clinical Presentation
- Recent onset of loss of appetite and WL, early satiety, fatigue
- Upper abd pain and vomiting
- Acanthosis nigercans
- Mass abdomen – nodular, hard, impaired resonance, mobile, moves with resp
- Dysphagia
- Jaundice and palpable liver (incurable if triad present HSM, Mass, Ascites)
- Ascites
- (+) Courvoisier sign
- (+) Troisier’s sign
- (+) Trousseau sign – migrating thrombophlebitis
- Anaemia, cachexia
- Metastatic disease – liver secondaries, ascites, secondaries in ovaries, umbilicus, supraclavicular nodes, lungs and bones
Investigations
- Hb%, haematocrit
- Barium meal – irregular filling defect
- Gastroscopy with biopsy (multiple edge biopsies)
- Endosonography – detects involvement of layers of the stomach, nodal status and whether tumour is early or advanced
- US abdominal – liver secondaries, ascites, nodes, ovaries
- FNAC from L.supraclavicular LN
- Laparoscopy – to stage disease
- CT abd and thorax – to see size, extent, infiltration, LN status, operability
- Tumour markers – CA 72-4 (evaluates relapse), CEA, CA 19-9, CA 12-5
Treatment
- Surgery best treatment if patient is operable
- Chemo – Epirubicin, Cisplatin, 5-FU
- Early growth – lower radical gastrectomy with removal of gr.omentum, ls.omentum, all LNs, spleen, tail of pancreas and later Billroth II anastomosis
- In case of growth in OG junction – upper radical gastrectomy and oesophagogastric anastomosis
- In case of growth in body or linitis plastica – total gastrectomy with oesophagojejunal anastomisis