J Korean Surg Soc.
2000 Jun;58(6):812-815.
Obstructive Jaundice in Patients with Gastric Cancer
- Affiliations
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- 1Department of Surgery, Korea University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
Abstract
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PURPOSE: Although obstructive jaundice is a rare presentation, it is an ominous sign of poor prognosis
in patients with gastric cancer. Thus, we investigated the incidence, the clinical features, the pathologic
characteristics, the treatment modality, and the prognosis for obstructive jaundice in patients with gastric
cancer. METHODS: A retrospective analysis was done for patients with gastric cancer who had presented
with obstructive jaundice at Korea University Guro Hospital from January 1988 to December 1998.
RESULTS
During that period, 2546 patients were diagnosed with gastric cancer, and obstructive jaundice
was revealed in 20 (0.78%). The mean age was 58 13 years, and the sex ratio (male:female)
was 5.7:1. Jaundice was the first presentation in two patients, and it developed in the other
18 patients during the follow-up period after the initial operation or chemotherapy. The level
of total bilirubin was 16.7 8.1 mg/dl, and the cause of the jaundice was lymph-node
enlargement at the porta hepatis. A percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage (PTBD) was
done in 17 patients, and improvement was seen in 13 (76%). The most common site of the
obstruction was common hepatic duct (CHD) (60%). Antrally located, moderately differentiated
and Borrmann type-III gastric cancers were commonly associated with obstructive jaundice.
The mean duration from jaundice to death was 4.6 6.2 month. CONCLUSION: Obstructive
jaundice is very rare in patients with gastric cancer and is associated with poor survival.
Although the bilirubin level was decreased by a PTBD, the survival was not improved. An
extended lymphadenectomy along the hepatoduodenal ligament is necessary to prevent
obstructive jaundice due to recurrence particularly, in patients with antrally located, moderately
differentiated and Borrmann type-III carcinomas.