Clinicopathological and Endoscopic Studies on Gastric Cancer Located; the Cardia

1991 
: In this study the definition of cardiac cancer (histologically adenocarcinoma) was taken to be a cancerous lesion, the size of which is less than 4 cm and the center of which is located within 2 cm from the esophagocardiac junction. 42 patients (0.8%) fit the above definition of cardiac cancer out of 4,958 patients with solitary gastric cancer operated on at the National Cancer Center Hospital daring the period between 1962 and 1988. The clinicopathological and endoscopic findings of these 42 patients were compared with those of 132 patients with gastric cancer located in the upper third of the stomach other than in the cardia (cancer in the other C-area). In the group with cardiac cancer, the male patients (M/F ratio: 3.7), the elderly patients (mean age: 61.3 years), a differentiated type of adenocarcinoma (90%), lesions located at the lesser curvature (62%) and the elevated type of lesion were found to predominate. The incidence of early cancer (60%) and the incidence of small lesions less than 2 cm (32%) in diameter were lower than in the patients with cancers in the other C-area. In the group with cardiac cancer, however, the incidence of such types of early cancer as the depressed lesion, a small lesion less than 2 cm in diameter and lesions difficult to diagnose endoscopically, have been increasing. In recent years, cardicac cancers have been found not only on the lesser curvature, but also in different areas of the cardia. These results suggest an improvement in endoscopic diagnosis for cardiac cancer. To make early detection more precise, it will be indispensable not to overlook even faint or indistinct mucosal abnormalities at the area adjacent to the esophagocardiac junction.
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