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Showing papers by "Jason W. H. Wong published in 2001"


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jun 2001-Gut
TL;DR: Serum soluble E-cadherin is a potential valid prognostic marker for gastric cancer and a high concentration predicts palliative/conservative treatment and T4 invasion.
Abstract: Background—Gastric cancer remains a major cause of cancer mortality globally but no good prognostic tumour marker is available. Soluble fragment of E-cadherin protein has been reported to increase in the sera of patients with cancer and recently was found to be elevated in 67% of patients with gastric cancer. Aims—To investigate if serum soluble E-cadherin is a valid prognostic marker in gastric cancer. Methods—Concentrations of soluble E-cadherin from 116 patients with histologically confirmed gastric adenocarinoma and 40 healthy subjects were measured using an immunoenzymometric method with a commercially available sandwich ELISA kit based on monoclonal antibodies. Results—The logarithm of the means of soluble E-cadherin concentration was significantly higher in patients with gastric cancers (mean 3.85 (SD 0.28)) than in healthy subjects (3.71 (0.18)) (p=0.001), and in palliative/conservatively treated cancers (3.91 (0.35)) than in operable cancers (3.78 (0.19)) (p=0.015). The logarithm of the concentrations correlated with tumour size (p=0.032) and carcinoembryonic antigen concentrations (p=0.001). The cut oV value calculated from discriminant analysis on operability and inoperability/palliative treatment was 7025 ng/ml. Soluble E-cadherin concentrations higher than this cut oV value predicted tumour (T4) depth invasion (p=0.020, confidence interval (CI) 1.008‐ 1.668) and palliative/conservative treatment (p=0.023, CI 1.038‐2.514). In contrast, the relative risks for lymph node (N2) metastasis, distant metastasis, and stage III/IV disease were 1.41, 1.33, and 1.55 respectively, despite not reaching statistical significance. Conclusion—Serum soluble E-cadherin is a potential valid prognostic marker for gastric cancer. A high concentration predicts palliative/conservative treatment and T4 invasion. (Gut 2001;48:808‐811)

91 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Formal three-field lymphadenectomy seems unnecessary, but the controversy of the optimal extent ofymphadenectomy and its impact on survival remains unanswered.
Abstract: Three-field lymphadenectomy for esophageal cancer remains controversial. The high prevalence of cervical lymph node involvement is the basis of cervical lymphadenectomy. Studies of recurrence patterns after esophagectomy, however, indicate that clinically relevant cervical nodal recurrence is uncommon, and that the incidence of such recurrence is similar to that of two-field lymphadenectomy. Moreover, a convincing survival benefit cannot be proven for the more extended lymphadenectomy. The emphasis of three-field lymphadenectomy has shifted to lymphadenectomy of the superior mediastinum and along the recurrent laryngeal nerve chains. Radical dissection of these areas may improve local disease control; the price to pay is increased postoperative morbidity and impaired long-term quality of life. Furthermore, the selection of appropriate patients for extended lymphadenectomy is difficult. Formal three-field lymphadenectomy seems unnecessary, but the controversy of the optimal extent of lymphadenectomy and its impact on survival remains unanswered.

90 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
V. Chow1, Simon Law1, King-Yin Lam1, John M. Luk1, Jason W. H. Wong1 
TL;DR: High MIB-1 expression in esophageal small cell carcinomas was associated with high telomerase activity, which may find application in anti-telomerase treatment for this aggressive tumor.
Abstract: Small cell carcinoma of the esophagus is a rare and aggressive malignant tumor. Telomerase activation is common in human cancers. There is a lack of data on telomerase activity in esophageal small cell cancers. The present report studied the role of telomerase activity in esophageal small cell carcinoma. The clinicopathologic data of five patients with small cell carcinoma of the esophagus who underwent primary surgical treatment between 1991 and 2000 were studied. Telomeric repeat amplification protocol assays were used to investigate telomerase activity in these tumors. The proliferative activity (MIB-1) and p53 expression of these tumors were also studied using immunohistochemistry and correlated with the telomerase activity. All five small cell carcinomas showed detectable telomerase activity in the primary tumor. Two out of the five morphologically normal esophageal mucosae adjacent to the primary tumor had detectable telomerase activity. There was no correlation between the p53 expression, tumor stage, survival of patients, and the presence of telomerase activity. High MIB-1 expression in esophageal small cell carcinomas was associated with high telomerase activity. Telomerase activation is common in small cell carcinoma of the esophagus. This fact may find application in anti-telomerase treatment for this aggressive tumor.

24 citations