Endoscopy International Open (Jul 2019)

Case of early-stage gastric cancer identified in the gastric mucosa with lanthanum phosphate deposition

  • Masafumi Takatsuna,
  • Manabu Takeuchi,
  • Hiroyuki Usuda,
  • Shuji Terai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1055/a-0918-5804
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 07, no. 07
pp. E893 – E895

Abstract

Read online

Background and study aims A 78-year-old man with Helicobacter pylori infection had been undergoing hemodialysis for chronic renal failure and receiving lanthanum carbonate preparations for 3 years. Endoscopy revealed fine white granular discoloration throughout the stomach, a moderately reddish depression on the lesser curvature of the gastric angle, and white granular discoloration in the surrounding area. A magnified image using narrow-band imaging showed that the depressed part had irregular vascular and pit structures. We established a diagnosis of intramucosal gastric cancer and performed endoscopic submucosal dissection. Histopathological examination revealed a well-differentiated adenocarcinoma that was confined to the mucosa of the depressed area. Moreover, using an electron probe microanalyzer-equipped electron microscope, we found that the degree of lanthanum deposition was lower in the tumor region than in the non-tumor region. Thus, the current case can help in understanding the relationship between lanthanum deposition and early-stage gastric cancer. Because gastric cancers can occur in lanthanum deposit-containing mucosa, esophagogastroduodenoscopy should be used carefully after understanding the characteristics of early- stage gastric cancer in such cases.