Thirty-eight cases of gastric carcinoma in patients 35-years-old and younger, occurring in the period 1948 to 1983, are reviewed. They comprised 2.2% of 1710 cases in all ages for the same 35 year period at the Charity Hospital. Women were afflicted as commonly as men. Blacks outnumbered whites 2.9:1.0. Obstruction, pain, and weight loss of relatively short duration were prominent symptoms. Tumors tended to be located distally in the stomach, and scirrhous in appearance. Histologically, diffuse type lesions were more common than intestinal or other type tumors. Radiographic evidence of disease was usually present in patients undergoing upper gastrointestinal series. Endoscopy with biopsy was a valuable diagnostic tool. Resectability in this group was not less than that achieved for all ages, however, only one patient has survived for five years. Advanced stage lesions predominated and were associated with poor survival. Earlier stage lesions in this age group appear to bear a more favorable prognosis.
The records of 1,710 patients with adenocarcinoma of the stomach treated at Charity Hospital over a 35-year period were reviewed to note any trends which might help in understanding the decreasing incidence and poor prognosis of the disease. The yearly number of gastric cancer patients has dropped from 234/100,000 in the 1950's to 195/100,000 in the 1960's to 108/100,000 patients in the last decade. The percentage of affected white males is decreasing at a rate equal to the increasing frequency of black female patients, while the ratios for black males and white females remain constant. The median age rose from 61.5 years to 66 years over the study period. The operability rate decreased from 82.4% to 72.8% and the resectability rate was 49%. Subtotal gastrectomy was the most common procedure, but radical subtotal gastrectomy gave the best 5-year survival. There are fewer lesions of the antrum today, but the highest number of 5-year survivors had antral lesions. Long-term survival of patients with lesions of the cardia improved from zero in the first 25 years to 14% in the last decade. For the last 2 decades, patients with stage III and IV lesions comprised one-half of the 5-year survivors. Our overall 5-year survival was 7.9%, but in the last decade it was 8.9%. Our 5-year survival for all patients who underwent a resection was 17.9%, but increased to 24.8% for the last decade. These improvements, in combination with a decrease in incidence, have dropped the overall mortality from gastric cancer.
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