Early angiographic changes after hemostatic radiotherapy for gastric cancer bleeding, mentioning the mechanism and potential immediate effects of the treatment
Yuki Wada, Motoko Konno, Tomoki Tozawa, Tomochika Sato, Tetsugaku Shinozaki, Satoshi Kumagai, Noriko Takagi, Koji Fukuda, Hiroyuki Shibata, Naoko Mori

TL;DR
This paper presents a case where hemostatic radiotherapy rapidly controlled gastric cancer bleeding by causing immediate changes in tumor vessels.
Contribution
The study provides evidence that hemostatic radiotherapy can induce rapid angiographic changes and control bleeding in gastric cancer.
Findings
Angiography showed disappearance of tumor vessels and stain after radiotherapy, even in non-embolized arteries.
The patient's hemostasis was achieved immediately after treatment, with stable vital signs and no hemoglobin decrease.
Abstract
Although hemostatic radiotherapy has been reported as an effective treatment for gastric cancer bleeding, its mechanism and immediate effects remain unclear. We experienced a case of gastric cancer bleeding originating from both the whole gastric tumor and a left gastric arterial pseudoaneurysm at the tumor-associated ulcer. The patient was treated with radiotherapy for bleeding from the whole gastric tumor, followed by transcatheter arterial embolization for the left gastric arterial pseudoaneurysm. Angiography performed two hours after radiotherapy with an X-ray of 8 Gy in a single fraction revealed the disappearance of both tumor vessels and tumor stain from not only the embolized left gastric artery but also both the non-embolized right gastric artery and common trunk of the left gastric and the left hepatic arteries, which indicated these angiographic changes of the non-embolized…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGastric Cancer Management and Outcomes · Esophageal and GI Pathology · Gastrointestinal Tumor Research and Treatment
