Endoscopy 2009; 41(10): 907-909
DOI: 10.1055/s-0029-1215062
Case report

© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Fulminant metastatic spread in a patient with an early gastric cancer

B.  Walter1 , A.  Probst1 , B.  Märkl2 , T.  Wagner2 , M.  Anthuber3 , H.  Messmann1
  • 1Department of Gastroenterology, Central Hospital Augsburg, Germany
  • 2Department of Pathology, Central Hospital Augsburg, Germany
  • 3Department of Abdominal Surgery, Central Hospital Augsburg, Germany
Further Information

Publication History

submitted 12 May 2009

accepted after revision 9 July 2009

Publication Date:
11 September 2009 (online)

Preview

A patient with an early gastric cancer was treated initially by endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) at our hospital. The resected specimen showed a depth of submucosal infiltration of more than 500 µm. Therefore, in accordance with the extended criteria with regard to EMR, the patient underwent gastrectomy. The TNM stage was pT1 (sm3), pN0 (0 / 58), cM0, L0, V0, G2 after surgery (UICC stage Ia). At 3 months later ultrasound revealed a new mass in the liver, and biopsy showed a rapidly growing metastasis of the gastric adenocarcinoma. Finally, immunohistochemical analysis of all the lymph nodes of the resected stomach revealed a micrometastasis (3mm) directly under the ESD site. The patient died 6 months later. This clinical case highlights the risk of affected lymph nodes in early gastric cancer and the consequent risk of metastasis which increases with greater depth of infiltration to the submucosa.

References

B. WalterMD 

Department of Gastroenterology
Central Hospital Augsburg

Stenglinstr. 2
Augsburg D-86156
Germany

Fax: +49-821-4003331

Email: walterbenjamin@gmx.net