To clarify the significance of immunoreactive carcinoembryonic antigen in gastric juice (gastric CEA) from gastric cancer patients, we studied the gastric CEA in comparison with cancer progress, histologic types of tumors, staining for CEA and extent of intestinal metaplasia. The gastric CEA levels from patients with other gastric diseases, i.e., gastric ulcer, duodenal ulcer and chronic gastritis were also investigated. The mean gastric CEA level from gastric cancer patients was significantly higher than from gastric or duodenal ulcer patients, but there was no significant difference between levels in patients with gastric cancer and in those with chronic gastritis. The gastric CEA levels from cancer patients increased with progression of the cancer. The differentiated carcinomas showed significantly higher gastric CEA levels than the poorly differentiated carcinomas. Positive CEA tumors showed significantly higher gastric CEA levels than did the negative CEA tumors. The tumors with diffuse intestinal metaplasia revealed high gastric CEA levels. Determination of gastric CEA levels is considered to be useful for screening of gastric cancer.
The relationship between lymph node metastases and postoperative prognosis in 209 patients with early gastric cancer was studied. As to the postoperative prognosis in relation to the extent of lymph nodes dissection, no significant difference was observed among the age-corrected 5-year survival rates following three surgical procedures in patients with early gastric cancer. Age-corrected 5-year survival rates were 0.92 +/- 0.44 R1-resection, 0.95 +/- 0.44 in R2-resection, and 1.00 +/- 0.06 in R3-resection, respectively. In addition, in 71 patients including 33 with early gastric cancer and 38 patients with advanced but relative early gastric carcinoma, the relationship between the immunostatus and postoperative prognosis was investigated. Postoperative age-corrected 5-year survival rate (0.904 +/- 1.153) of the optimal responders with good immunostatus was significantly higher than that (0.582 +/- 1.153) of the suboptimal responders with impaired immunostatus (P less than 0.01). Thus, conservative surgery for regional lymphadenectomy may be an effective procedure for cure of early gastric carcinoma, particularly in cases of a carcinoma limited to the mucosal area of the stomach.
Preoperative intrarectal administration of 5-FU emulsion was attempted as an adjuvant chemotherapy to surgery for rectal cancer. The drug concentrations of resected specimens were determined and histological examinations of them were carried out in order to evaluate the effect of anticancer drugs on the metastatic lymph nodes as well as on the primary tumors. 5-FU levels both in the regional lymph nodes and primary tumors of 18 patients with rectal cancer, who were given with the 5-FU emulsion (emulsion group) or 5-FU suppository (suppository group) intrarectally two hours before surgery, was found to be much higher in emulsion group than in suppository group. 46 patients with rectal cancer were treated preoperatively with intrarectal administration of 5-FU emulsion (25 cases) or 5-FU suppositories (21 cases) for a period of 10 days before surgery, and the histological effect of this regimen on the metastatic lesion in the lymph nodes, as well as in the primary tumor was examined. No detectable difference was found in the primary lesions between the emulsion group and the suppository group. In the metastatic lesions, however, the rate of effectiveness was higher in the emulsion group than in the suppository (68 percent versus 33 percent).
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