Gastric cancer is one of the major causes of death from constructing a Kaplan–Meier survival curve. Univariate analysis was performed to evaluate significant malignant disease in Japan. An increasing number of elderly patients are presenting with this disease as the relationships between clinicopathologic features and patient survival. The results of the analysis are size of the geriatric population in Japan increases. The purpose of the present study was to determine the summarized in Table 1(a). Unfavourable prognostic factors included tumours factors affecting the prognosis of elderly patients suffering from gastric cancer. The prognosis of gastric cancer in located throughout the entire stomach, presence of lymph-node metastasis, capillary microinvasion, the elderly was examined in a study of 923 consecutive patients treated in the Department of Surgery, Sendai infiltrative and scirrhous histologic pattern and cancer invasion beyond the subserosal layer. Multivariate analysis National Hospital, Sendai, Japan in the 10-year period from 1985 to 1995. The macroscopic and microscopic using Cox’s proportional hazards regression model showed lymph-node metastasis, depth of invasion, classifications of gastric cancer were based on the general rules for Gastric Cancer Study in Japan. The patients lymphatic invasion and tumour location to be significantly correlated with 5-year survival (Table 1(b)). were divided into two age groups: group 1 (over 70 years of age) consisting of 273 patients aged 70–87 years Oohara et al. reported that gastric cancer in the aged (>70 years) was characterized by a large tumour, deep (average age, 75 years) and group 2 consisting of 650 patients aged 23–69 years (average age, 56 years). There cancer cell invasion, advanced stage and poor prognosis. However, some previous studies have suggested that the was no significant difference between the two groups with respect to gender, location, depth of invasion, long-term prognosis for gastric cancer in the elderly is favourable. In a study of 22 patients over 65 years of cancer–stromal pattern, infiltrative pattern, mode of lymph node metastasis, microscopic lymphatic invasion age presenting with gastric cancer in Mount Sinai Medical Center, Edelman et al. suggested that such patients have and type of operation, but there were significant differences with respect to tumour size, macroscopic the same morbidity and mortality rates following surgery for gastric cancer as do younger patients. Adachi et al. appearance, histologic pattern and microscopic vascular permeation. found that the patient’s age was not related to tumour size and depth of invasion, lymph-node metastasis or Survival curves were calculated by the Kaplan–Meier method, and comparisons were made using the log-rank histologic stage. They showed that elderly patients (>80 years) could be successfully treated with a good clinical test. The overall survival rate of patients in group 1 was similar to that of patients in group 2. The relationship outcome and that post-operative complications were between clinicopathologic variables and 5-year survival not serious. rate in group 1 patients was then determined by
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