Abstract

A 73-year-old man was initially diagnosed with a 50-mm, depressed-type early gastric cancer on the anterior wall of the angulus, and the lesion was curatively resected en bloc by endoscopic submucosal dissection. Pathology revealed a 54mm × 43mm differentiated-type predominant adenocarcinoma with focal undifferentiated-type component that was confined to the mucosa without ulceration. Eleven years after endoscopic submucosal dissection, lymph node metastasis along the lesser curve was incidentally detected on magnetic resonance imaging and diagnosed by endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration biopsy. The patient received distal gastrectomy with D2 lymph node dissection. A resected lymph node revealed a well-differentiated adenocarcinoma with a poorly differentiated component; thus, the final diagnosis was late recurrence of early gastric cancer originally treated by endoscopic submucosal dissection. This report demonstrates that metastatic recurrence may occur in curative endoscopic submucosal dissection for early gastric cancer and that gastric cancer can recur even after more than 5years.

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