Published online Jun 28, 2013. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v19.i24.3904
Revised: April 17, 2013
Accepted: May 8, 2013
Published online: June 28, 2013
Processing time: 219 Days and 22 Hours
Histopathological results are critical for the diagnosis and surgical decision regarding gastric cancer. However, opposite opinions from radiology and pathology can sometimes affect clinical decisions. The two cases reported in this article were both highly suspected as gastric cancer by clinical manifestations and radiologic findings, although both showed negative results in the first biopsy examination. One was confirmed as gastric cancer by the time of the 6th biopsy, while the other was still negative even after 8 biopsies. With a definite pathologic result and the agreement of the patient for the latter case, both of them finally received surgery. Postoperative pathological examination revealed findings that were the same as Borrmann type IV gastric cancer. We believed that duplicate biopsies under radiologic guidance were necessary for highly suspected gastric cancer cases in the absence of a definite pathology result, and patients should be under close follow-up. We propose that, if gastric cancer is highly suspected when typical radiology changes of widely diffuse gastric parietal lesions suffice to exclude lymphoma and other similar situations, and even in absence of a positive biopsy result, a diagnostic laparotomy under laparoscopy and even radical gastrectomy may be reasonably performed by an experienced gastric cancer center with the agreement of the patient after being decided by a multidisciplinary discussion team.
Core tip: Histopathological diagnosis is the diagnostic gold standard of gastric cancer required by medical ethics and practice guideline. However, cases with repeated suspected false negative pathological results always concern medical practitioners a great deal. This article might illustrate a possible standard process for these cases. We propose that, if gastric cancer is highly suspected when typical radiology changes of widely diffuse gastric parietal lesions suffice to exclude lymphoma and other similar situations, and even in absence of a positive biopsy result, surgery could be perform with the agreement of the patient after being decided by a multidisciplinary discussion team.