Authors

  1. Xu, Weihua MD, PhD
  2. Zhou, Chengjun MD
  3. Zhang, Gangfeng MD
  4. Wang, Hongbo MD
  5. Wang, Li MD
  6. Guo, Jianqiang MD, PhD

Abstract

Gastric lymphoma is characterized by a good prognosis with slow progression and a nonspecific appearance under the endoscope. A biopsy is performed for accurate diagnosis. For this study, endoscopy and biopsy specimens were analyzed retrospectively to investigate the rate of accurate diagnosis of gastric lymphoma in first-, second-, and third-round endoscopic and biopsy procedures and to understand the causes of discrepancies. Fifty-four cases of gastric lymphoma were diagnosed in 32,000 patients. The rate of positive Helicobacter pylori infection was 70.4%. Of these, 13 cases were diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and 41 cases were marginal zone B-cell lymphoma. Thirty-two gastric lymphoma cases (59.3%) were diagnosed by first-round endoscopy and biopsy, 13 (24.1%) cases required second-round endoscopy and biopsy, and 9 (16.7%) cases were determined in the third round of endoscopic and biopsy procedures. Repeating endoscopy and biopsy reduced discrepancies in the diagnosis of gastric lymphoma by 40.8%, which can significantly improve the overall accuracy of diagnosis and treatment of gastric lymphoma.