Abstract

Out of 421 patients who had partial gastrectomy 20-25 years ago for gastric or duodenal ulcer, 108 were examined by endoscopy with multiple biopsy. In no case were the endoscopic appearances of the mucosæ interpreted as malignant, though in 2 patients the clinical history suggested malignant disease. Histological examination revealed infiltrating carcinoma in 4 patients, 3 of whom had intramucosal carcinoma only. 3 further patients had severe dysplasia (carcinoma-in-situ). Only 1 patient had a near-normal mucosa close to the anastomosis; in the remainder the gastric remnant showed various degrees of dysplasia, metaplasia, or chronic atrophic gastritis. In the patients with carcinoma only 28 (12%) of the 226 biopsy specimens revealed the malignant lesion. Patients who have had partial gastrectomy for benign lesions are at high risk of gastric-stump carcinoma. If, 20 years after operation, they have an endoscopy with multiple biopsy, stump carcinoma may be detected early when the prognosis after operation is probably good.

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