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Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Cancer of the Stomach

Archives of Surgery, 1958
It is obvious in a critical comparative survey of the literature on gastric carcinoma that there is a wide variation in the published five-year survival rates. Thus, the reported rates expressed in terms of five-year survivors range from a low of 0.7% to a high of 35%.
Charles J. Koucky   +4 more
openaire   +5 more sources

Cancer statistics for African American/Black People 2022

open access: yesCa-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2022
African American/Black individuals have a disproportionate cancer burden, including the highest mortality and the lowest survival of any racial/ethnic group for most cancers.
Angela N Giaquinto   +2 more
exaly   +2 more sources

Cancer of the stomach

The American Journal of Surgery, 1981
Carcinoma of the stomach, although its incidence is decreasing in the United States, is still a fatal disease. The results today are actually no better than they were 30 years ago because we are still making late diagnoses. In order to improve our results in the treatment of cancer of the stomach, we must perform fiberoptic gastroscopy in individuals ...
William R. Nuessle   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Global Cancer Statistics, 2002

open access: yesCa-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2005
Estimates of the worldwide incidence, mortality and prevalence of 26 cancers in the year 2002 are now available in the GLOBOCAN series of the International Agency for Research on Cancer.
Freddie Bray
exaly   +2 more sources

Cancer of the Stomach

2020
Abstract Gastric cancer is a common malignancy globally, although it is uncommon in the United States and Western Europe. Risk factors include Helicobacter pylori infection. Significant advances in the molecular classification of gastric cancer were made by The Cancer Genome Atlas and the Asian Cancer Research Group.
Geoffrey Y. Ku, David H. Ilson
openaire   +3 more sources

Cancer of the Stomach

1989
Polyps are the most frequent benign tumours, being found in 3% of symptomatic patients subjected to upper gastrointestinal endoscopy. Hyperplastic polyps are the most common form (85%). Adenomatous polyps account for less than 5% and mesenchymal ones constitute 10% of the total. Multiple or diffuse polyps are unusual.
F. Mazzeo   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Cancer of the Stomach

Postgraduate Medicine, 1954
Attention is called to the important differences between malignant gastric ulcer and the proliferative tumor. Likewise the great difficulty in differentiation between malignant and benign ulcer is emphasized. The operability rate in carcinoma of the stomach still remains only 50 per cent or less.
openaire   +3 more sources

Cancer of the Esophagus and Stomach

Mayo Clinic Proceedings, 2008
Upper gastrointestinal tumors involving the esophagus and the stomach are a serious public health problem worldwide. The West has seen a dramatic increase in the incidence of gastroesophageal cancers in the past 2 decades. Although Barrett esophagus has been well characterized, the exact pathway to developing frank malignancy remains undefined. Current
openaire   +3 more sources

Stomach cancer.

Clinical evidence, 2005
Stomach cancer is usually an adenocarcinoma arising in the stomach, and includes tumours arising at or just below the gastro-oesophageal junction (type II and III junctional tumours). The annual incidence varies among countries and by sex, with about 80 cases a year per 100,000 in Japanese men, 30/100,000 in Japanese women, 18/100,000 in British men ...
openaire   +6 more sources

Nutrition and stomach cancer

Cancer Causes and Control, 1996
Epidemiologic evidence on the relation between nutrition and stomach cancer is reviewed. Stomach cancer shows a distinct international variation and dramatic worldwide decline. These descriptive features suggest that dietary factors are important in determining the risk of stomach cancer.
Suminori Kono, Tomio Hirohata
openaire   +3 more sources

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