Molecular diagnosis and therapy for occult peritoneal metastasis in gastric cancer patients

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Abstract

To apply an individualized oncological approach to gastric cancer patients, the accurate diagnosis of disease entities is required. Peritoneal metastasis is the most frequent mode of metastasis in gastric cancer, and the tumor-node-metastasis classification includes cytological detection of intraperitoneal cancer cells as part of the staging process, denoting metastatic disease. The accuracy of cytological diagnosis leaves room for improvement; therefore, highly sensitive molecular diagnostics, such as an enzyme immunoassay, reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, and virusguided imaging, have been developed to detect minute cancer cells in the peritoneal cavity. Molecular targeting therapy has also been spun off from basic research in the past decade. Although conventional cytology is still the mainstay, novel approaches could serve as practical complementary diagnostics to cytology in near future.

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Kagawa, S., Shigeyasu, K., Ishida, M., Watanabe, M., Tazawa, H., Nagasaka, T., … Fujiwara, T. (2014). Molecular diagnosis and therapy for occult peritoneal metastasis in gastric cancer patients. World Journal of Gastroenterology, 20(47), 17796–17803. https://doi.org/10.3748/wjg.v20.i47.17796

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