TY - JOUR
T1 - Primary gastrointestinal lymphoma
T2 - A review of 21 cases
AU - Kaufman, Z.
AU - Eliashiv, A.
AU - Shpitz, B.
AU - Witz, M.
AU - Griffel, B.
AU - Dinbar, A.
PY - 1984/5
Y1 - 1984/5
N2 - A retrospective study of 21 patients who had suffered from gastrointestinal lymphoma was carried out. Gastric involvement was more common than involvement of the small or large intestine and carried a better prognosis. Gastrointestinal lymphoma generally occurs most frequently during the fourth to seventh decades of life. In our study, however, five lymphomas occured in patients under 20 years of age. Clinical symptoms were nonspecific, and abdominal mass was found in only 15% of the patients on clinical examination. All patients were explored, 17 underwent resection, and 4 laparotomy and biopsy. Five‐year survival was much better for patients who had undergone resection. Survival was inversely proportionate to the extent of nodal spread. Multiple lesions on the same organ yielded a 5‐year survival of 20%, while a single lesion offered a 55% chance of 5‐year survival. Diffuse histiocytic lymphoma was the commonest type, followed by the poorly differentiated lymphocytic type. A longer survival rate was present in the lymphocytic type. However, the highest survival rate was in those patients in whom definite resections of the lesion were performed followed by radiation and chemotherapy, especially for gastric tumor.
AB - A retrospective study of 21 patients who had suffered from gastrointestinal lymphoma was carried out. Gastric involvement was more common than involvement of the small or large intestine and carried a better prognosis. Gastrointestinal lymphoma generally occurs most frequently during the fourth to seventh decades of life. In our study, however, five lymphomas occured in patients under 20 years of age. Clinical symptoms were nonspecific, and abdominal mass was found in only 15% of the patients on clinical examination. All patients were explored, 17 underwent resection, and 4 laparotomy and biopsy. Five‐year survival was much better for patients who had undergone resection. Survival was inversely proportionate to the extent of nodal spread. Multiple lesions on the same organ yielded a 5‐year survival of 20%, while a single lesion offered a 55% chance of 5‐year survival. Diffuse histiocytic lymphoma was the commonest type, followed by the poorly differentiated lymphocytic type. A longer survival rate was present in the lymphocytic type. However, the highest survival rate was in those patients in whom definite resections of the lesion were performed followed by radiation and chemotherapy, especially for gastric tumor.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/0021259427
U2 - 10.1002/jso.2930260106
DO - 10.1002/jso.2930260106
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AN - SCOPUS:0021259427
SN - 0022-4790
VL - 26
SP - 17
EP - 21
JO - Journal of Surgical Oncology
JF - Journal of Surgical Oncology
IS - 1
ER -