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DOI: 10.1055/s-2001-17927
Upper Gastrointestinal Tumors
Publikationsverlauf
Publikationsdatum:
18. Oktober 2001 (online)
Diagnostic Aspects
The diagnosis of early gastric cancer has long been regarded as a speciality of the Japanese, and Western endoscopic series have not found increasing numbers of early cancers among all gastric carcinoma cases diagnosed - as shown in an American series comparing two 10 - 15-year periods (16 % early cancers in 1975 - 1984 and 17 % in 1990 - 2000) [1]. In Japanese Americans, screening for gastric cancer using serum pepsinogen and endoscopy was evaluated in 776 asymptomatic persons in Seattle; 60 of 103 individuals invited underwent endoscopy, and two adenomas, no cancers, and 57 intestinal metaplasias were found on biopsy [2]. Similarly, 109 East Asians living in New York underwent endoscopy; one esophageal cancer was identified, and around 25 % of those studied had chronic active gastritis and intestinal metaplasia [3]. On the other hand, prediagnosis endoscopy in patients with distal esophageal adenocarcinoma was reported to be associated with a more favorable tumor stage than in control individuals who did not undergo endoscopy [4].
Sophisticated endoscopic techniques such as staining and magnification endoscopy have been described, although not for case-finding purposes (i. e., to improve the accuracy of screening) but for differential diagnosis of lesions identified by conventional endoscopy. Abstracts of two Japanese studies including 25 [5] and 306 patients [6], respectively, described features of gastric lesions on magnification endoscopy capable of being used to distinguish between benign and malignant cases. In one of these abstracts, a sensitivity of 95 % and a specificity of 96 % were reported [6]. Another Japanese study claimed that the margin of lesions can be defined more precisely using magnification endoscopy than with dye-staining [7]. Not unexpectedly, chromoendoscopy detected more adenomas in the duodenum of patients with familial adenomatous polyposis than standard endoscopy (mean 5.0 vs. 1.7; n = 10) [8]. Similarly, autofluorescence endoscopy was used in 55 patients with various gastric tumors; no ability to distinguish between cancer and adenoma was found, although all of the lesions were clearly differentiated from normal mucosa [9]. A “layer lifting” technique was reported that can be used to cut out a gross specimen using a needle knife and a smear to establish undiagnosed malignancy, in five patients with gastric wall thickening.
Finally, several abstracts dealt with regression of high-grade mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma after Helicobacter eradication [10], gastric involvement in T-cell leukemia/lymphoma [11], gastric plasmacytoma [12], and mantle-cell lymphoma [13].
References
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- 2 Nietsch H, Namekata T, Rubin C E, et al. Gastric cancer screening in asymptomatic Japanese Americans using serum pepsinogen levels and endoscopy [abstract]. Gastrointest Endosc. 2001; 53 AB 209
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T. Rösch, M.D.
Dept. of Internal Medicine II
Klinikum rechts der Isar
Technical University of Munich
Ismaningerstrasse 22
81675 München
Germany
Fax: + 49-89-4140-4872
eMail: thomas.roesch@lrz.tum.de