Patient characteristics
Of the 20,187 gastric cancer patients reviewed, 193 (0.96%) were identified as having lung metastasis. Their clinical characteristics are summarized in Table 1. The median age was 53 (27–74) years, and male gender (63.7%) was predominant. Both chest X-ray and chest CT images were available in 117 (60.6%) patients, and 76 patients had serial chest X-rays available for review. For gastric cancer with pulmonary metastases, Bormann type III was the most commonly observed type, and about two thirds of these patients developed lung metastasis in the later course of the disease. At the time of diagnosis of pulmonary metastases, the lung was the solitary metastatic organ in 40 (20.7%) patients, while 153 patients had concomitant metastatic sites other than the lung, such as peritoneal seeding (42.5%), liver (40.9%), bone (17.6%), or bone marrow (5.7%). Approximately 30% of patients did not received chemotherapy, and most patients received conventional 5-FU-based or taxane-based chemotherapy. One patient underwent metastasectomy for a solitary lung nodule.
Table 1 Patients characteristics
Patterns of lung metastasis
Of 193 patients, 101 (52.3%) patients were categorized as having hematogenous metastases, 68 (35.2%) as having pleural metastases, and 51 (26.4%) as having lymphangitic metastatic lesions (Table 2; Fig. 1). Among them, 24 (12.6%) patients had a mixed pattern of pulmonary metastasis as described in Fig. 2. To compare clinical characteristics according to the pulmonary metastatic patterns, we divided patients into four groups according to their pulmonary metastatic patterns based on imaging studies: hematogenous, lymphangitic, pleural, and mixed (Table 2). For the lymphangitic group, the mean age was younger (p < 0.001), a higher portion were of male sex (p = 0.027), and there was a higher likelihood for concomitant liver metastases (55.7%) or peritoneal seeding (54.1%). Pleural metastases were associated with diffuse type according to the Lauren classification when compared to other groups, although this was not statistically significant (p = 0.081). In case of pleural metastasis, it was positively correlated with gastrectomy history (p = 0.015) and the presence of peritoneal metastasis (p = 0.020).
Table 2 Frequency of pulmonary metastasis patterns in gastric cancer patients
Survival
The median follow-up duration was 87.0 (9–162) months. The median time from diagnosis to lung metastasis was 6 (0–138) months, which was not different according to the patterns of pulmonary metastasis (p = 0.164). The median survival after diagnosis of pulmonary metastasis was 4.0 (0–67) months (Fig. 3). Exceptionally, there was one patient who developed a single lung metastasis 23 months after curative total gastrectomy for well-differentiated gastric adenocarcinoma. The patient underwent lung metastasectomy and has been disease free for 37 months since surgery. In univariate analysis, advanced stage at the time of diagnosis (p = 0.004), absence of gastrectomy history (p = 0.045), presence of ascites (p = 0.024) or bone metastasis (p = 0.009), and lymphangitic (p = 0.002) or pleural metastasis (p = 0.000) demonstrated poor survival with statistical significance, but other variables, including sex, diagnosis time of pulmonary metastasis, concomitant metastasis to liver, bone marrow and palliative chemotherapy, did not predict survival (data not shown). As shown in Table 3, the pattern of lung metastases was associated with significantly different clinical features in sexual distribution (p = 0.0152), Bormann type (p = 0.0107), histologic types (p = 0.0064), Lauren classification (p = 0.0436), lymphatic invasion (p = 0.0091), and metastatic organ sites (p ≤ 0.0001). For metastatic pattern, hematogenous lung metastasis was significantly associated with liver metastasis when compared with lymphangitic metastasis (p = 0.0006). In contrast, pleural metastases were considerably associated with peritoneal seeding rather than other visceral metastases with statistical significance (p = 0.0024) by Fisher’s exact test using the permutation method and Bonferroni’s correction for multiple testing. At multivariate analysis, lymphangitic (HR = 1.861, 95% CI 1.164–2.977, p = 0.009) and pleural metastasis (HR = 2.213, 95% CI 1.419–3.450, p = 0.000) were significant predictable parameters for poor survival.
Table 3 Patients’ clinical characteristics according to pattern of lung metastases