World Journal of Surgical Oncology (Nov 2010)

Late-onset peritoneal recurrence of advanced gastric cancer 20 years after primary resection

  • Mohri Yasuhiko,
  • Tanaka Koji,
  • Kobayashi Minako,
  • Saigusa Susumu,
  • Inoue Yasuhiro,
  • Toiyama Yuji,
  • Okugawa Yoshinaga,
  • Miki Chikao,
  • Kusunoki Masato

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1477-7819-8-104
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
p. 104

Abstract

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Abstract Late onset of peritoneal recurrence of gastric cancer more than 10 years after surgery is extremely rare, and only three cases have been reported. We present the case of a 61-year-old man who was diagnosed finally with peritoneal recurrence of gastric cancer 20 years after primary curative resection. As a result of small-bowel obstruction caused by peritoneal recurrence, diverting ileostomy with partial ileal resection was performed. The resected specimen revealed tubular adenocarcinoma that resembled the primary gastric cancer. The clinical course after the second operation was unfavorable and systemic chemotherapy had no effect. He died at 62 years of age, 21 years and 7 months after initial gastrectomy. Immunohistochemical analysis using antibodies against proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), Ki-67, and p53 was performed to investigate the phenotype of primary and recurrence cancer. Protein expression of proliferation markers such as PCNA and Ki-67 was down-regulated, but p53 was overexpressed at the site of recurrence. These data suggest that late peritoneal recurrence has a low proliferation rate and is resistant to chemoradiotherapy. In conclusion, we present late onset of peritoneal recurrence of gastric cancer more than 20 years after primary surgery, and speculate on the mechanism of late-onset recurrence in our case.