Gastric Cancer Revealed by a Perforated Ulcer: A Case Report and Review ()
1. Introduction
Gastric cancer (GC) is a common disease [1]. It is the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide [2]. In the majority of cases it is an adenocarcinoma [3] [4] with various forms (vegetating, ulcerated or infiltrative forms). Gastric cancer is not classically a surgical emergency. However, it can evolve into emergency complications such as hematemesis, perforation leading to peritonitis [5]. Gastric cancer presenting with a gastric perforation is a rare event, accounting for less than 1% of gastric cancer [6]. Its treatment is not consensual [7], some focusing on the management of the peritonitis emergency and others on the technical oncological aspects of surgery. We report a case of a perforated gastric ulcer that turned out to be cancer and compare our treatment with literature.
2. Observation
A 52-year-old man consults the emergency department of the Hubert-Koutoukou-Maga National University Medical Center in Cotonou for generalized abdominal pain. The onset dated back to 4 days after a fasting period by a cramp-like epigastric pain. It generalized 24 hours before admission. He also reported a history of undocumented epigastralgia. Clinical examination noted: a poor general condition, a temperature of 375˚C, a normal blood pressure and peritoneal irritation syndrome. Frontal abdomen X-ray showed bilateral pneumoperitoneum. The patient was admitted to the operating room on diagnosis of acute generalized peritonitis by gastric ulcer perforation.
Surgery revealed a punctiform perforation with indurated edges on the anterior surface of the antrum. Simple closure was performed after resection of the edges (Figure 1). Anatomopathological examination concluded to a gastric adenocarcinoma. Extension screening revealed no metastasis. The patient underwent one month later a second surgery and a partial gastrectomy was performed with D2 lymph node excision and Billroth II gastrojejunostomy (Figure 2). Anatomopathological examination of the specimen concluded that the adenocarcinoma was of intestinal type, staged PT3N3MX having infiltrated the gastric wall up to the serosa (Figure 3). Ten lymph nodes were invaded out of the
Figure 1. Simple closure performed during first surgical intervention.
Figure 2. Billroth II gastrojejunostomy performed during second surgical intervention.
Figure 3. Anatomopathology findings. (a) Histological appearance of the tumor (HE ×40) showing a hyperplastic gastric epithelium with adenomatous-like glands in the chorion; (b) Histological aspect of the tumor (HE ×100) showing a moderately differentiated tubular adenocarcinoma. The tumor spreads to the serosa.
eighteen lymph nodes found. The proximal and distal surgical section slices were uninvaded. Post-operatively, an anastomotic digestive fistula occurred and was successfully treated medically. The patient received adjuvant chemotherapy with the ECF protocol (Epirubicin, Cisplatin and 5-Fluorouracil). The patient is still alive, 3 years after the gastrectomy.
3. Discussion
Gastric cancer (GC) is exceptionally revealed by a perforation. In a study conducted by Franco R et al. [8] on 2564 patients, the incidence rate of perforation among gastric carcinomas was less than 1% (0.39%). In most cases, gastric carcinoma is not suspected to be the cause of perforation prior to emergency laparotomy [8]. According to Lehnert T et al. [9] the only preoperative argument that could guide the surgeon is the age of the patient. Indeed, the average age of patients presenting a perforated gastric cancer is 65, whereas patients with perforated benign gastric ulcer are younger around the age of 50. However, our patient is 52 years old and has a perforated GC. Another one [10] refers to weight loss as a presumptive factor. In fact, there are no strong clinical arguments for the diagnosis of cancer in a patient with a perforated gastric ulcer and the main method to confirm malignant perforation is intraoperative frozen section, which also is the primary clinical standard at present [11] [12]. Often, the invasion of the serosa and perigastric lymph nodes indicates stage III or IV TNM classification [13]. However, it is reported in the literature that 20% to 30% of cases of perforated gastric cancer are early stage, which makes the situation challenging [8] [13].
The abdominal X-ray aims to confirm perforation and CT scan with contrast injection could show the presence of malignant gastric ulceration (extension of the ulcer to the body of the stomach, localized thickening of the gastric wall, contrast of the lesion, presence of adenopathies or even metastases) but a context of perforation prevents digestive opacification and reduces the sensitivity of this examination [14].
Surgery is undoubtedly the only potentially curative treatment for gastric cancer [1]. However, we need to determine during laparotomy for perforated gastric ulcers, whether the lesion is a cancer or benign ulcer. Unfortunately a therapeutic decision must be taken urgently without the help of extemporaneous examination due to their limited availability in our context. As an expert, Ménégaux F [11], states that considering the antral localization of the tumor, an emergency distal gastrectomy provides a better guarantee of an efficient treatment in case of a cancer. This is confirmed by the study by Adachi Y et al. [13] on perforated gastric cancer, the largest study on this subject (n = 155), carried out in Asia. Emergency gastrectomy was performed in 83% of the cases with 7% of mortality compared to 70% in the case of perforation repair. Moreover, gastrectomy is also well adapted to a benign gastric ulcer since it leads to healing with a low long-term recurrence rate compared to local resection and suture [11].
On the other hand, some authors [8] support perforation repair because of the fragile state of these patients who could not withstand major surgery in this emergency. A recent systematic review [7] revealed a mortality of 11.4% and 1.9%, respectively, in one-stage versus two-stage gastrectomy (P = 0.010). According to Wenjun Xiong et al. [12] a long-term survival should be considered and R0 resection is the most important. When R0 resection cannot be achieved in the initial treatment phase, palliative gastrectomy should be avoided (Prefer simple perforation repair) [12]. They advocate that advanced GC with acute perforation undergoing initial perforation repair can receive subsequent neoadjuvant therapy. A second stage surgery should depend on the response to therapy [12]. We performed a two-stage gastrectomy but the secondary surgery was delayed (1 month) while performing additional investigations. Normally, it should be performed a few days after the first surgery in order to avoid peritoneal adhesions or peritoneal carcinomatosis [11].
In summary, at present, high-level evidence is absent for surgical treatment and there is no guideline or consensus for diagnosis and treatment. Therefore, it is necessary to explore and establish a comprehensive process of diagnosis and surgical treatment for acute perforated GC, which may be very helpful for first-line surgeons and can also improve the short-term outcomes and long-term survival for GC with acute perforation.
4. Conclusion
Acute perforation of gastric cancer is few. There is no guideline or consensus for its treatment. We suggest that one step gastrectomy is the treatment of choice in a patient with a good general condition and no underlying pathology and if R0 resection is possible. Otherwise, a simple perforation repair should be performed followed in a second step by a gastrectomy.