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Multiple gastric carcinomas 21 years after gastrojejunostomy without gastrectomy. Report of a case.

We report a case of gastric carcinoma after gastrojejunostomy (GJ-stomy) without gastrectomy. Multiple gastric carcinomas were discovered 21 years after GJ-stomy without gastrectomy which had been performed for treatment of pyloric stenosis due to severe gastric ulcer. Multiple gastric carcinomas were found in the stomach, or the esophagocardiac junction, and in the corpus and anastomotic lesion of the GJ-stomy. Under the light microscope, intestinal metaplasia was detected in the antral mucosa and the area around the anastomosis. In immunohistochemical analysis, p53-specific antibodies gave a positive reaction in every gastric carcinoma and in the noncancerous gastric glands around the carcinoma at the anastomosis and in the corpus. Cells positive for immunostaining with Ki-67-specific antibodies were more numerous in all gastric carcinomas and in the area around the anastomotic lesion than in the normal gastric mucosa. Hsp70-specific antibodies reacted with cells in the noncancerous glands around the carcinoma in the anastomotic area. Mucosal injury and the potential for carcinogenesis due to exposure to gastroduodenal reflux are discussed. The results of this study suggest that similar cases with gastroduodenal reflux should be followed carefully.

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