Abstract

Background and ObjectivesMucinous gastric carcinoma (MGC) is a rare kind of malignancy with unclear prognosis. This study aims to assess the clinicopathological features and prognosis of MGC. MethodsWe retrospectively analyzed a consecutive series of 244 MGC patients who underwent radical gastrectomy with D2 lymphadenectomy, and compared the data with 260 gastric signet ring cell carcinoma (SRC) patients. ResultsThe univariate survival analysis showed that the surgical types, diameter of the primary tumor, the Borrmann type, pathological depth of tumor invasion (pT), pathological number of metastatic lymph node (pN), pathological tumor lymph metastasis (pTNM), and vascular invasion were all significant predictors of survival (all P < 0.05). The multivariate survival analysis revealed that the diameter of the tumor, the Borrmann type, pT, pTNM stage, and vascular invasion as an independent predictive factor of survival (all P < 0.05). Compared with the SRC group, the MGC group had more male patients, more elder patients, larger tumor diameter, more T3 and T4 invasion to the gastric wall, more patients with metastatic lymph nodes, more pTNM stage III, and less Borrmann type 1. The overall survival rate of patients with MGC was significantly lower than that of patients with SRC (P < 0.001). ConclusionsMGC was an aggressive malignancy which had unique clinicopathological features.

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