Endoscopic treatment of anastomotic leakages by metallic clips represents a safe and easily repeated method and, compared to conservative treatment, it seems to offer several time and cost advantages. Further studies involving a larger number of patients are needed to verify this finding.
The results for 162 patients who underwent curative gastrectomy for gastric cancer from January 1988 to June 1994 were analysed statistically with special reference to the effect of lymph node dissection. Median survival was 69.3 months and the overall cumulative 5-year survival rate was 50.2 (95 per cent confidence interval (c.i.) 41.6-58.1) per cent. By univariate analysis age, histology, depth of tumour invasion, node involvement, number of metastatic lymph nodes and type of lymphadenectomy were found to be significant factors related to survival time. Multivariate analysis with the Cox model and stratified for tumour node metastasis stage revealed that only the number of metastatic nodes (P = 0.04) and the extent of lymphadenectomy (P = 0.003) affected survival independently. With respect to D1 lymphadenectomy, the relative risk associated with D2 and D4 lymphadenectomy was respectively 0.61 (95 per cent c.i. 0.34-1.10) and 0.26 (95 per cent c.i. 0.12-0.60). The 5-year survival rate was 28 per cent for patients who had a D1 dissection, 63 per cent for those who had D2 and 68 per cent for those who had D4. These results suggest that extended lymphadenectomy (D2) and especially superextended lymphadenectomy (D4) can improve survival in patients with gastric cancer.
We report a new case of solitary fibrous tumor (SFT) of the liver, an extremely rare neoplasm. Including the present case no more than ten cases are reported in the English-language literature. To date there is no definite proof of the origin of this tumor. Both mesothelial and fibroblas-tic genesis has been postulated. The monoclonal antibody CD 34 has recently been used for the characterization of SFT. SFT would appear to be histogenetically related to a CD 34 - positive fibroblastic stem cell. A 61-year-old woman was admitted to our department with epigastric and right hypochondriac pain, weight loss, and hypoglycemia. Ultrasonography and computed tomography demonstrated a large heterogeneous mass in the right hepatic lobe. A right hepatectomy was performed. The tumor weighed 2850 g and microscopic section revealed a peculiar random pattern, the so-called patternless pattern of spindle tumor cells separated by abundant thick collagen bands. The tumor presented a number of highly cellular areas composed of plump spindle cell with hyperchromatic nuclei and rare mitotic figures. Ninety percent of the neoplastic cells displayed strong immunoreactivity for CD 34/My 10. The postoperative course was uneventful and the patient is alive and well without recurrence 6 years after surgery.
The pN classification of gastric cancer is currently based on the distance of metastatic nodes from the primary tumor (TNM-1987). The UICC (Union Internationale Contre le Cancer) has recently proposed a new classification system based on the number of the involved nodes (TNM-1997). The present prospective study is aimed at verifying whether the two classifications (1) assign approximately a similar rank to individual patients and (2) give comparable prognostic information. The Cox regression model was used to evaluate the prognostic significance of either the distance or the number of positive nodes, controlling for sex, age, site, histology and depth of tumor invasion, in a group of 175 patients who underwent curative surgery for gastric cancer from March 1988 to October 1997. Among the patients classified as N1 and N2 according to TNM-1987, 81.8% (36/44) and 35.8% (19/53), respectively, were coded as N1 and N2 by the new classification. The survival probabilities of N1 and N2 categories were similar in both classifications. The N2 category of TNM-1987 comprised also 10 cases with >15 positive nodes (N3 category of TNM-1997), who presented a large excess mortality (RR = 35.14 with respect to N0). When the site and number of positive nodes are combined in a new variable, both appear to be important from a prognostic point of view. Both anatomic location and number of nodes with metastasis are important predictors of survival in gastric cancer patients. Caution should be used when replacing the old classification with the new one, as they group patients in a different way.
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