Background. Gallbladder diseases, especially cholelithiasis, are extremely frequent in Chile, and an increasing frequency of gallbladder carcinoma has been observed during the last decades. Hyperplastic and atypical epithelial lesions of gallbladder epithelium have been considered potential precursors of invasive carcinoma. The current study was designed to study the frequency, distribution, extension, and probability of routine detection of potentially preneoplastic changes of gallbladder epithelium.
Methods. Epithelial changes were histologically studied by mapping gallbladders obtained at elective cholecystectomy for lithiasis in 162 Chilean patients.
Results. Antral‐type metaplasia was found in 95.1% of the cases, intestinal metaplasia in 58.1%, hyperplasia in 46.9%, dysplasia in 16%, and carcinoma in situ in 2.5%. A significant association of intestinal metaplasia with hyperplasia, intestinal metaplasia with dysplasia, and hyperplasia with dysplasia was found. Hyperplasia and dysplasia were also present in four cases with carcinoma in situ. Mean extension of the lesions (percentages of the sections in which the change was observed) was antral‐type metaplasia (62.7%), intestinal metaplasia (25.3%), hyperplasia (24.1%), dysplasia (15.5%), and carcinoma in situ (9.7%). Antral‐type and intestinal metaplasia were more extensive and more severe in patients older than 50 years of age. Hyperplasia was more extensive in cases in which it was associated with dysplasia and carcinoma in situ.
Conclusions.The extension of metaplasia seems to depend in part on the age of the patients. The association of intestinal metaplasia with hyperplasia and dysplasia agrees with the findings of other authors that relate metaplasia to gallbladder cancer. The epithelial lesions are focal or partially confluent, thus a single random histologic section will detect less than one third of the hyperplasias, dysplasias, and carcinomas insitu.
It has been suggested that gastric cancer has a worse prognosis in young patients, but the data are controversial. The aim of this study was to compare the 5-year survivals after gastrectomy for gastric cancer in two groups of patients (those < or = 45 years of age and those (> 45 years) and to determine some of the prognostic factors. The 5-year survival was significantly better for patients < or = 45 years of age. Survival was also better for young patients with a curative resection and also for those with lymph node metastases. However, survival was not significantly different for the two groups when the resection was not curative and when the lymph nodes were not involved. Survival was no different for the two groups when compared at each stage, although a multivariate analysis showed that age > 45 years, moderate or poor degree of differentiation of the tumor, advanced tumors, the presence of lymph node involvement, and a noncurative resection were independent negative prognostic factors. Long-term survival after gastrectomy for gastric cancer depends on the stage of the disease; the age of the patient is not a decisive factor.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.