Journal of Cancer Therapy
Vol.05 No.14(2014), Article ID:52043,5 pages
10.4236/jct.2014.514137
Clinicpathological Features of Gastric Cancer in Young Patients
Yan Wang1, Bing Lian2, Ying Dong3, Ningju Wang1*, Wenjun Yang3*
1Medical Oncology Department of General Hospital, Ningxia Medical University, Yinchuan, China
2Surgical Oncology Department of General Hospital, Ningxia Medical University, Yinchuan, China
3Key Laboratory of Reproduction and Heredity of Ningxia Region, Ningxia Medical University, Yinchuan, China
Email: *doctorning@163.com, *yw001@nxmu.edu.cn
Academic Editor: Sibu P. Saha, University of Kentucky, USA
Copyright © 2014 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution International License (CC BY).
Received 28 September 2014; revised 23 October 2014; accepted 18 November 2014
ABSTRACT
The incidence of gastric cancer (GC) in young patients has showed a stable or even slightly increasing trend in recent years all over the world. Little is known about the clinicpathological features of young patients with GC in Ningxia region, located in the northwest part of China. To define the clinicpathological features of GC in young patients in this region, 117 patients with GC, who were admitted to the Department of Medical Oncology, General Hospital of Ningxia Medical University, Ningxia, China, were enrolled in a retrospective database between 2000 and 2005. The data from 55 patients aged less than 35 years old were compared with those from 62 controls aged between 36 and 70. It was found that in young group, the percentages of females, the tumors in the lower third of the stomach, tumor size larger than 4 cm, macroscopic type Borrmann III tumors, poorly differentiated histology, the 7th T stage T3 + T4, the distribution of tumor-nodes-metastasis
Keywords:
Young People, Gastric Cancer, Clinicpathological Features
1. Introduction
The incidence of gastric cancer
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Patients
In this study, one hundred and seventeen GC patients were enrolled, who were admitted to the Department of Medical Oncology, General Hospital of Ningxia Medical University, Ningxia of China from 2000 to 2005. Among 117 GC patients, fifty five patients defined as less than 35 years old were classified as the young group and 62 patients aged over 35 years old were classified as the control group. We compared the clinicpathological features between the young group and the control group. The features compared included gender (female or male), presentation symptoms
2.2. Statistical Analysis
Clinicpathological parameters were analyzed by chi-square test and fisher’s exact test. All statistical analyses were performed by Statistical Package of Social Sciences 13.0 software. P value below 0.05 was considered to be statistically significant. Disease-specific survival was calculated by the method of Kaplan-Meier. Kaplan- Meier analysis with log-rank testing was used for multivariate analysis.
3. Results
In this analysis, 117 patients were enrolled, including 55 patients less than 35 years old (young group) and 62 patients aged over 35 years old (control group). The mean ages of the young group and the control group were about 32.94 years old (range, 17 to 35 years old) and 52 years old (range, 36 to 70 years old), respectively. The demographic results were shown in Table 1. There was a significant difference in the proportion of females between two groups (52.73% vs. 20.97%, P < 0.001). In the young patients group, the gender ratio (female to male) was higher than that in the control group (1.12:1 vs. 0.27:1, P < 0.05). Significant differences could also be seen between the young group and control group in the tumor location, tumor size, macroscopic type, histological type, TNM stage, and surgical radicalism with all P values being below 0.05. For the young patients, the percentage of the tumor in the lower third of the stomach in the young group was much higher than that in the control group (56.36% vs. 32.26%, P < 0.05). It was more common to see a tumor with larger size in young patients than the older patients (85.45% vs. 59.68%, P = 0.004). With respect to macroscopic type, the most common
Table 1. Clinicopathological features of gastric cancer in the young (≤35 years old) and control (>35 years old) groups.
type of GC in young patients was Borrmann type III (58.18%), while Borrmann type I was rarely found
During the study period, we did not have a standardized protocol for postoperative chemotherapy or radiotherapy. Adjuvant therapy was suggested to all patients with T3 - T4 classification or lymph node metastasis. Among the young patients, 27 (49.1%) patients completed the adjuvant chemotherapy. The median cycle of che- motherapy was four. Adjuvant chemotherapy was performed with a 5-fluorouracil based combination regimen. There was no difference in the adjuvant therapy between two groups. No patients received adjuvant radiotherapy.
The exact data of presentation symptoms with GC in two groups were summarized in Table 2. For the young patients, the most common presenting symptom was abdominal pain (63.4%), followed by anemia (34.54%) and indigestion (21.82%).
At the last follow-up, there were 12 (21.82%) patients alive and 40 (72.73%) who died from disease in the young group. Median survival was 24 months and 49 months in young and elder groups, respectively. The 5- year survival rates were significantly different between the young patients and elderly groups (21.8% vs. 48.4%, P < 0.05) (Figure 1).
Table 2. Presentation symptoms with gastric cancer in two groups.
Figure 1. Survival curves for patients with gastric cancer in the young and control groups. Kaplan-Meier method was performed to analyze disease-specific survival difference between two groups. There was a significant difference in the survival between two groups, P < 0.05.
4. Discussion
In spite of the gradually declining incidence of GC in the worldwide in recent thirty years, the incidence of GC in young patients shows a stable or even slightly increasing trend [10] . Some reported the proportion of patients with GC under the age of 40 years old varied between 2% and 9% [4] [5] . Some claimed the incidence in young patients with gastric adenocarcinoma ranged from 4.4% to 16.2% when cut-off point was set at 40 years old [9] [11] . In our series, the young age group was defined as patients under 35 years old because intestinal metaplasia, an aging process due to acid reflux affecting the gastric mucosa, was thought to begin at around the age of 30 - 35 [12] [13] . We focused on young patients under 35 years old to determine the clinicpathological features of GC in the comparisons between young patients and elderly patients.
Many reports showed a higher incidence of GC in females among young patients than among older patients [6] [14] - [16] . For example, Qiu et al., who investigated 294 young patients with gastric carcinoma, reported that the female-to-male ratio was 1.39:1 [6] and Kim et al. reported a female predominance of about 1.17 fold of male in young patients [16] . In this study, we also found a female/male ratio of 1.12:1 in young patients as opposed to 0.27:1 in control group. Although the reasons for the high incidence of female patients in the young group are still under-covered, it was proposed that the differences may due to the female hormones such as estrogens [17] or at least due in part to the higher expression of estrogen receptors and intracytoplasmic estradiol in young patients with GC [18] .
Surgery is the only potential curative modality for localized GC. Curative resection offered the only chance of long term survival. It was reported that the young patients with curatively resected GC had a better survival rate than the young patients with non-resected GC (median survival = 70.6 months vs. 9.1 months, P < 0.001) [16] . However, tumor staging was a crucial factor in determining whether and how to perform surgery. Some investigators have reported low radical surgery resection and extremely poor survival in young patients, apparently reflecting the advanced stage at which these carcinomas were diagnosed. Our results showed that the percentages of poorly differentiated were significantly higher in the young group than in the control group. We also noticed that there was a trend to more cases with the TNM stage IV in the group of young patients than that in control patients. Therefore, it seemed quite reasonable that the proportion of curative resection (56.36%) in the young group was lower than that in the control group (74.19%) and the overall survival curves for the young and control groups were quite different in our study.
5. Conclusion
All in all, in our series, we found that the clinicpathological features of GC differed between young and elderly patients. The prognosis of the youth group was worse than that of older patients. There might be some explanations for the differences: first, the number of early stage of GC took up low proportion and advanced stage of GC accounted for the majority, which delayed the diagnosis; second, the rate of radical surgery resection was low; third, the number of poor differentiation of pathology was high. These partly reflected the characteristics of GC in young people in this region. In conclusion, focusing on early diagnostic rate and choosing a suitable operative treatment should be critical to improve prognosis of young patients with GC in Ningxia region of China. One limitation of the current study is the relatively small sample size, potentially limiting its statistical power. These findings, while significant, warrant validation in a larger study of GC patients.
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 81160249 and 81460434), Ningxia Key Natural Science Foundation (No. NZ10113 and NZ13057), Grant NZ11263 from the General Hospital of Ningxia Medical University, China.
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NOTES
*Corresponding authors.