| Literature DB >> 16378235 |
Tsutomu Namikawa1, Michiya Kobayashi, Takehiro Okabayashi, Shinzo Ozaki, Seiya Nakamura, Kuniyasu Yamashita, Hiroshi Ueta, Junichi Miyazaki, Satoru Tamura, Yuji Ohtsuki, Keijiro Araki.
Abstract
A 52-year-old man suffering from a pure-type primary gastric small cell carcinoma was treated with surgery and combination chemotherapy. The small cell carcinoma, approximately 6.5 cm in diameter, was situated in the posterior wall of the antrum and there were no distant metastases. Total gastrectomy and regional lymph node dissection was carried out. Histological examination revealed a solid pattern of proliferation of small cells with hyperchromatic, round nuclei and scant cytoplasm. Neoplastic cells infiltrated into the subserosal layer with severe lymphatic and vascular invasion. Regional lymph node cells were mostly replaced by tumor cells that stained positive for Grimelius, neuron-specific enolase (NSE), and synaptophysin. Accumulations of electron-dense core granules in the small neoplastic cells were seen by electron microscopy. Following surgery, the patient was treated with adjuvant chemotherapy consisting of cisplatin and etoposide. The patient is alive and recurrence free 3 years after surgical operation. We review 107 published cases of primary gastric small cell carcinoma, an extremely rare disease first reported in 1976. Small cell carcinoma is an aggressive, malignant tumor. Intensive chemotherapy is essential for patient survival even when curative surgical resection is carried out.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2005 PMID: 16378235 DOI: 10.1007/s00795-005-0293-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Mol Morphol ISSN: 1860-1499 Impact factor: 2.309