Prevalence and characteristics of post-gastroscopy gastric cancer: A retrospective study from an academic medical center
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Elsevier Ltd
Abstract
Background and Study Aims: Gastric cancer is diagnosed by endoscopy but false negative rates of up to 10% in the west and 40% in Asia have been reported. In Lebanon, little is known about the rates of post-gastroscopy gastric cancer (PGGC), defined as the proportion of patients diagnosed with gastric cancer with a negative previous examination within 2 years of diagnosis. We aimed to examine the rate of PGGC and its risk factors, clinico-pathologic and endoscopic characteristics at a University medical Center. Patients and Methods: Retrospective analysis of patients with histologically proven gastric malignancy over the last 14 years. Patients with history of upper endoscopy preceding the index diagnostic endoscopy by 6 to 24 months were included. Results: 18,976 patients underwent upper endoscopy and gastric cancer was diagnosed in 323 (1.7%). Of those, only 4 (1.2%) had a preceding endoscopy within 6 to 24 months of diagnosis: 3 adenocarcinoma and one MALT lymphoma. Upon review of the initial endoscopy, a mucosal abnormality had been noted in all 4 patients and biopsies taken in 3 were negative for cancer. The mean time to cancer diagnosis was 8 months (range 6–13 months). Conclusion: A small proportion of gastric carcinomas are missed on endoscopy in this study. Patients with endoscopic evidence of mucosal abnormalities and negative biopsies should undergo repeat examination with multiple biopsies. Proper endoscopic technique, lesion recognition and adoption of performance improvement measures are important to optimize endoscopic practice. © 2021
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Adenocarcinoma, Endoscopy, Interval cancer, Lymphoma, Academic medical centers, Gastroscopy, Humans, Prevalence, Retrospective studies, Stomach neoplasms, Adult, Aged, Article, Cancer diagnosis, Clinical article, Clinical feature, Cohort analysis, Diagnosis time, Female, Histopathology, Human, Human tissue, Male, Marginal zone lymphoma, Middle aged, Retrospective study, Risk factor, Stomach adenocarcinoma, Stomach biopsy, Stomach cancer, University hospital, Stomach tumor