| Literature DB >> 26566136 |
Daxing Xie1,2, Liang Liu1,2, Hasan Osaiweran1,2, Chaoran Yu1,2, Fang Sheng1,2, Chun Gao1,2, Junbo Hu1,2, Jianping Gong1,2.
Abstract
Gastric cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death worldwide. Here, we propose a novel type of tumor metastasis designated as Metastasis V in gastric cancer. Metastasis V is defined as the appearance of cancer cells in the mesogastrium with perigastric adipose tissue. To detect its incidence and characterize its clinic pathological features, large cross sectional tissue analysis of mesogastrium from 74 patients were used. Metastasis V was detected in 1 of 40 (2.5%) patients with early gastric cancer, 8 of 34 (24%) patients with advanced gastric cancer. The mean distance of Metastasis V from gastric wall was approximately 2.6 cm. Metastasis V was closely associated with tumor invasion depth, along with a number of positive lymph node metastasis. The prognosis of patients with Metastasis V was significantly (P<0.05) worse than those with tumor cell-free mesogastrium. These findings indicate that by using whole-sectional analysis, Metastasis V can be detected in the mesogastrium of gastric cancer patients, and also suggests that it may be a risk factor for patient survival after radical surgery.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26566136 PMCID: PMC4643961 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0142970
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Detection of Metastasis V in gastric cancer patients.
(A) Large cross sectional tissue samples analysis of mesogastrium from surgically resected specimens. mLGEV, mRGEV, mLGV and mRGV were analyzed. (B) Continuous sections at 1-cm-width intervals of mesogastrium specimens. (C) Isolated cancer cells were detected in the mesogastrium of resected gastric cancer specimens by both HE staining (left) and immunohistochemistry with CK AE1/AE3 antibody (right). (D) Distance of Metastasis V from the gastric walls.
Clinicopathological data of 74 patients.
| Parameters | Results |
|---|---|
| Age (year, mean, range) | 52(23–72) |
| Tumor size (cm) (mean±SD) | 2.7±1.2 |
| Sex (number of patients) | |
| Male | 42 |
| Female | 32 |
| Tumor location | |
| Upper | 8 |
| Middle | 11 |
| Lower | 55 |
| Histological grade | |
| Well | 9 |
| Moderate | 30 |
| Poor | 35 |
| Depth of invasion | |
| T1 | 40 |
| T2 | 10 |
| T3 | 20 |
| T4 | 4 |
| Lymph node metastasis | |
| N0 | 45 |
| N1 | 18 |
| N2 | 6 |
| N3 | 5 |
Upper: upper third of the stomach; Middle: middle third of the stomach; Lower: lower third of the stomach. T1: invasion to lamina propria, muscularis mucosae, or submucosa; T2: invasion to muscularis propria; T3: invasion to subserosal connective tissue without invasion of visceral peritoneum or adjacent structures; T4: invasion to serosa (visceral peritoneum) or adjacent structures. N0: no regional lymph node metastasis; N1: metastasis in 1 to 2 regional lymph nodes; N2: metastasis in 3 to 6 regional lymph nodes; N3: metastasis in 7 or more regional lymph nodes. T and N categories were based upon the 7th Edition of the AJCC Cancer Staging Manual.
Clinicopathological data of patients with Metastasis V.
| Patients | Age/ gender | Tumor size(cm) | Tumor location | Metastasis V location | Histological grade | Depth of Invasion | Lymph node metastasis | TNM Staging |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 44/Female | 2.0 | Lower | mRGEV | Por | Serosal | Positive(7/26) | T3N3M0 |
| 2 | 34/Female | 3.0 | Upper | mLGV | Por | Serosal | Positive(1/21) | T3N1M0 |
| 3 | 54/Male | 3.0 | Upper | mLGV | Por | Serosal | Positive(4/22) | T3N1M0 |
| 4 | 54/Male | 5.0 | Lower | mRGEV | Mod | Submucosa | Positive(8/30) | T1bN3M0 |
| 5 | 61/Male | 2.0 | Lower | mLGV, mRGV | Mod | Serosal | Positive(3/34) | T3N2M0 |
| 6 | 66/Male | 5.0 | Middle | mLGV | Por | Serosal | Positive(2/29) | T4aN1M0 |
| 7 | 69/Male | 1.5 | Middle | mLGV | Por | Serosal | Positive(2/13) | T4aN1M0 |
| 8 | 38/Female | 3.0 | Lower | mRGEV | Mod | Serosal | Positive(22/32) | T3N3M0 |
| 9 | 71/Male | 3.0 | Lower | mRGEV | Mod | Subserosal | Negative(0/28) | T3N0M0 |
Por: poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma, Mod: moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma.
Fig 2Schema of locational relationship between primary tumor and Metastasis V in nine patients with Metastasis V.
Correlation between Metastasis V and clinicopathologic findings (N = 74).
| Variables | Metastasis V | P value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Positive (n = 9) | Negative (n = 65) | ||
| Sex | |||
| Male | 6 | 36 | NS |
| Female | 3 | 29 | |
| Tumor size (cm) | |||
| 2.7±1.2 (mean±SD) | 3.1±1.2 | 2.6±1.2 | NS |
| Age (year) | |||
| Average (52±11) | 54±14 | 48±11 | NS |
| Tumor location | |||
| Upper | 2 | 6 | NS |
| Middle | 2 | 9 | |
| Lower | 5 | 50 | |
| Histological grade | |||
| Well | 0 | 9 | NS |
| Moderate | 4 | 26 | |
| Poor | 5 | 30 | |
| Depth of invasion | |||
| T1 | 1 | 39 | 0.001 |
| T2 | 0 | 10 | |
| T3 | 6 | 14 | |
| T4 | 2 | 2 | |
| Lymph node metastasis | |||
| N0 | 1 | 44 | 0.001 |
| N1 | 4 | 14 | |
| N2 | 1 | 5 | |
| N3 | 3 | 2 | |
1. X 2 test or Fisher’s exact test
Fig 3The overall survival of patients with or without Metastasis V.
(A) The Kaplan–Meier overall survival curves showed the prognosis of Metastasis V-positive patients was significantly (P = 0.006) worse than Metastasis V-negative patients. (B-C) Metastasis V-positive patients had a significantly poorer prognosis than Metastasis V-negative patients in the T3 subgroup (P = 0.004; B) or in clinical stage III (P = 0.0005; C).
Fig 4E-cadherin and DAB2IP expression in normal gastric mucosa, primary gastric tumors and Metastasis V within the mesogastrium.
(A) Representative IHC staining for DAB2IP and E-cadherin from the same patient. (B) The relative quantitative analysis of E-cadherin and DAB2IP expression. One asterisk indicated statistical significance in normal mucosa vs. primary tumors (*, P < 0.01). Two asterisks indicated statistical significance in primary tumors vs. mesogastrium (**, P<0.01).