Gastric Cancer Flashcards

1
Q

What are the incidence of gastric cancer

A

= incidence of adenocarcinaom at gastro-oesophageal junction

  • 23/100,000 a year in the uK
  • wide unexplained geographical variations
  • more like in male than female
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2
Q

What are the risk factors of gastric cancer

A
  • pernicious anaemia
  • Blood group A
  • H.Pylori
  • atrophic gastritis
  • adenomatous polyps
  • lower social class
  • smoking
  • diet
  • nitrosamine exposure
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3
Q

What are the symptoms of gastric cancer

A

Often non-specific

  • dyspepsia
  • weight loss
  • vomiting
  • dysphagia
  • anaemia
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4
Q

What are the signs of gastric cancer

A

Suggests incurable disease

  • epigastric mass
  • hepatomegaly
  • jaundice
  • ascites
  • Virchow’s node
  • acanthosis nigricans
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5
Q

How does gastric cancer spread

A
  • local
  • lymphatic
  • blood borne
  • transcoelemic (e.g. to ovaries)
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6
Q

what investigations do you use for gastric cancer

A
  • Gastroscopy and multiple ulcer edge biopsies
  • EUS - to evaluate depth of invasion
  • CT/MRI - for staging
  • Staging laparoscopy - for locally advanced tumours
  • Cytology of peritoneal washings - to identify peritoneal metastases
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7
Q

What is the treatment of early stage gastric cancer

A

may be resectable endoscopically

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8
Q

What is the treatment of more advanced distal tumours

A
  • partial or total gastrectomy
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9
Q

What other treatments for gastric tumours are there

A
  • Combination chemotherapy – appears to increase survival in advanced disease perioperatively
  • Surgical palliation – for obstruction, pain, haemorrhage
  • Targeted therapies likely to have an increasing role, eg trastuzumab for HER-2-positive tumours
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10
Q

What are the types of gastrectomy

A
  • Curative gastrectomy - localised lesion
  • Total gastrectomy - lesions in proximal third or extensive infiltrated disease
  • partial gastrectomy - lesions in distal two thirds
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11
Q

What is a Billroth I

A
  • partial gastrectomy with simple gasproduodenal re-anastomosis
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12
Q

What is a billroth II gastrectomy

A

partial gastrectomy with gastrojejunal anastomosis; duodenal stump is oversewn (leaving blind afferent loop) and anastomosis is achieved by a longitudinal incision into the proximal jejunum

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13
Q

What is a roux-en Y

A

following total or partial gastrectomy, the proximal duodenal stump is oversewn, the proximal jejunum is divided from the distal duodenum and connects with the oesophagus (or proximal stomach after partial gastrectomy), while the distal duodenum is connected to the distal ileum

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14
Q

What is the benefit of lymph node clearance

A
  • limited benefit and increased morbidity with extended lymph node resections (D2 or D3) over resection limited to perigastric lymph nodes (D1)
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15
Q

What are the complications of gastrectomy

A
  • abdominal fullness - feeling of early satiety (+/- discomfort and distension) improving with time
  • afferent loop syndrome
  • diarrhoea
  • gastric tumour - rare complication of any surgery which reduces acid production
  • amylase increases
  • dumping syndrome
  • weight loss
  • bacterial overgrowth
  • anaemia
  • Oesteomalacia
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16
Q

What happens if amylase increases with abdominal pain after a gastrectomy

A

if with abdominal pain, this may indicate afferent loop obstruction after Billroth II surgery and requires emergency surgery

17
Q

What is afferent loop syndrome

A
  • afferent loop may fill with bile after a meal causing upper abdominal pain and bilious vomiting
  • improves with time
18
Q

What is dumping syndrome

A

fainting and sweating after eating food

19
Q

describe how dumping syndrome occurs after a gastrectomy

A
  • food of high osmolality being dumped in the jejunum, causing oligaemia from rapid fluid shifts
  • ‘Late dumping’ is due to rebound hypoglycaemia and occurs 1-3h after meals
  • Both tend to improve over time but may be helped by eating less sugar and more guar gum and pectin
20
Q

what is the prognosis of gastric cancer

A
  • Notorious for gloomy prognosis and non-specific presentation
  • <10% overall but nearly 20% for patients undergoing radical surgery
  • Prognosis much better for ‘early’ gastric carcinoma