1. [A case of long-term survival after hepatic resection for metastatic gastric cancer].
- Author
-
Shinke G, Noda T, Hatano H, Dono K, Shimizu J, Oshima K, Miyake M, Komori T, Kawanishi K, Imamura H, Morita S, Iwazawa T, Akagi K, and Kitada M
- Subjects
- Aged, Gastrectomy, Hepatectomy, Humans, Liver Neoplasms secondary, Male, Neoplasm Staging, Recurrence, Stomach Neoplasms surgery, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Liver Neoplasms surgery, Stomach Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
We report a case of long-term survival of a patient who underwent hepatic resection for metastatic gastric cancer. The patient was a 75-year-old man who underwent distal gastrectomy for gastric cancer in 2004. On pathological examination, the tumor was diagnosed as T4a (SE) N0M0, stage IIB. A metastatic lesion was detected in segment 6 of the liver at 2 years after gastrectomy. With regard to radiological findings, a single metastatic lesion and no lymph node metastasis or peritoneal recurrence was observed. The hepatic lesion was curatively resected. Another metachronous liver metastasis was identified in segment 7 of the liver at 3 years after gastrectomy. We resected the remnant liver metastasis, after which the patient has not exhibited any evidence of tumor recurrence for more than 5 years. This case suggests that patients could survive for a long period after undergoing resection of hepatic metastasis because no lymph node metastasis was observed during the operation of the primary gastric cancer, only a single hepatic metastasis without any metastasis to other organs was observed, and the metastatic lesion of the liver could be curatively resected.
- Published
- 2013