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Napier Horn posted an update 1 day, 6 hours ago
A 71-year-old man underwent total gastrectomy with Roux-en-Y reconstruction for gastric GIST in October 2017. Liver metastasis was identified in June 2019, and chemotherapy with imatinib was started in July. In December, the patient presented with acute upper abdominal pain and back pain. Abdominal contrast-enhanced CT showed that the jejunum extending from the duodenal stump was dilated. In addition, part of the jejunum had a poor wall contrast effect, with ascites also found surrounding it. We suspected a strangulated ileus and immediately performed emergency surgery. We found an internal hernia with incarceration of the afferent loop at the Petersen’s defect. The time from the onset of symptoms to the surgery was relatively short, and the surgery was completed with hernial repair and closure of the hernial orifice without the development of bowel necrosis; the patient’s postoperative course was good. Although the frequency of internal hernia after gastrectomy is relatively low, there is a risk that it may be severe if it occurs. Therefore, care should be taken to not cause internal hernias during surgery, and an internal hernia should be considered in the event of sudden abdominal pain after gastric surgery.
It has been reported that we should give consideration to death caused by other disease from comparison between overall survival(OS)and disease specific survival(DSS)in several studies.
Relationships between the clinicopathological features of OS and DSS were examined among 197 patients undergoing surgery for gastric cancer.
In OS analysis, the Charlson comorbidity index(CCI), pathological T and postoperative complications with Clavien-Dindo Grade≥Ⅲ were associated significantly in multivariate analyses(p=0.009, 0.022, 0.027). On the other hand, in DSS analysis, CCI was not associated, but gender, DG/TG, pathological N and complication were associated significantly( p=0.0002, 0.016, 0.0003, 0.009).
The complication is a significant prognostic factor of OS and DSS in gastric cancer patients. It is important to pay attention for comorbidities and to prevent the postoperative complications in order to improve the prognosis in gastric cancer surgical therapy.
The complication is a significant prognostic factor of OS and DSS in gastric cancer patients. It is important to pay attention for comorbidities and to prevent the postoperative complications in order to improve the prognosis in gastric cancer surgical therapy.S-1 plus oxaliplatin(SOX)chemotherapy is now widely used for the treatment of unresectable gastric cancer but there are few case reports about conversion surgery following SOX. Hereby, we report a case of type 4 gastric cancer with peritoneal dissemination successfully treated with conversion surgery after intensive SOX chemotherapy. A 69-year-old female was diagnosed of type 4 gastric cancer by upper endoscopy(por1, HER2 negative)and peritoneal disseminations were identified on left diaphragm and mesentery under direct vision. After 11 courses of SOX chemotherapy, CT revealed that primary tumor markedly decreased in size. Therefore, staging laparoscopy was performed and peritoneal disseminated lesions disappeared. Peritoneal cytology also turned negative. Subsequently, total gastrectomy and splenectomy were performed. Histology revealed that tumor was categorized as por2, ypT2N3M0, ypStage ⅢA, and Grade 2 in histological evaluation criteria. SOX was continued as an adjuvant chemotherapy for another 6 months and the patients remain healthy without recurrence. Unresectable gastric cancer with peritoneal dissemination can be successfully treated with conversion surgery following SOX chemotherapy and staging laparoscopy was useful to evaluate peritoneal dissemination. When conversion surgery is indicated for gastric cancer with peritoneal dissemination, downstaging should be confirmed by staging laparoscopy.A 77-year-old woman, who underwent surgery for malignant melanoma of the nasal cavity 15 months prior and radiation and interferon-β therapy for local recurrence, presented with epigastric discomfort. PET-CT examination showed multiple intussusceptions due to small intestinal tumors. Four intussusceptions were detected during laparotomy, and she underwent partial resection of the small intestine. Pathological findings revealed small intestinal metastases that originated from malignant melanoma. Following administration of nivolumab, local recurrence disappeared, and she was well. Because the prognosis of malignant melanoma with systemic metastases has improved due to the administration of new drugs, such as nivolumab, the incidence of indications for surgery for metastatic melanomas of the gastrointestinal tract is expected to increase.A 53-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital because of hepatic dysfunction found during a medical checkup. Cholecystitis was suspected, and unenhanced computed tomography (CT) was initially performed because she had bronchial asthma. However, a tumor-like lesion was seen at the bottom of the gallbladder. Contrast-enhanced CT was performed 3 weeks later, and the tumor-like lesion was enhanced and had increased in size. Endoscopic ultrasound fine-needle aspiration did not reveal any signs of malignancy. Colonoscopy revealed ulcerations in the transverse colon, and invasion from gallbladder cancer was suspected. Our preoperative diagnosis was xanthogranulomatous cholecystitis, but gallbladder cancer could not be excluded. Gallbladder bed resection and partial resection of the transverse colon were performed. Intraoperative frozen section analysis did not reveal any malignant findings; hence, we considered that lymph node dissection was unnecessary. Pathological examination confirmed xanthogranulomatous cholecystitis with abscess formation. In cases of surgery for xanthogranulomatous cholecystitis, it is important to consider that this condition could coexist with gallbladder cancer.A 79-year-old woman visited our hospital complaining of bloating. An abdominal enhanced CT scan revealed pancreatic body cancer with cancerous ascites and multiple liver metastases. We started gemcitabine(GEM)plus nab-paclitaxel chemotherapy. find protocol Chemotherapy was not continued because she was unable to take oral medication owing to increased cancerous ascites. We conducted modified KM-cell-free and concentrated ascites reinfusion therapy(KM-CART). Her symptoms improved, and she began having oral intake after KM-CART. Chemotherapy was then re-initiated. Seven months have now passed since we started chemotherapy, and we can continue chemotherapy while conducting KM-CART repeatedly. KM- CART is useful for treating unresectable pancreatic cancer with massive cancerous ascites in terms of continuing chemotherapy.