In order to determine the relative frequency of the secondary deposits in various organs of the body, I have constructed the following table, based upon an analysis of 1574 cases of cancer of the stomach in which the situation of the metastases were given:89
| Lymphatic glands. | Liver. | Peritoneum, omentum, and intestine. | Pancreas. | Pleura and lung. | Spleen. | Brain and meninges. | Other parts of the body. |
| 551 | 475 | 357 | 122 | 98 | 26 | 9 | 92 |
| 35% | 30.2% | 22.7% | 7.8% | 6.2% | 1.7% | 0.6% | 5.8% |
89 These cases include, in addition to those cited in the preceding foot-note, those of Dittrich (Prager Vierteljahrschr., vol. xvii.), Wrany (ibid., vols. xciv. and xcix.), Katzenellenbogen (op. cit.), and Lange (op. cit.). Metastases in the intestine formed only a small number of those under the heading peritoneum, omentum, and intestine, but as they were all included together in Gussenbauer's large statistics, the intestinal metastases could not well be placed separately. In 673 cases the peritoneum and omentum were cancerous in 21.7 per cent.
Secondary cancerous deposits are probably even more frequent in the lymphatic glands than appears from the table. In 1153 cases of gastric cancer in which the situation of the affected lymphatic glands is specified, the abdominal glands, and chiefly those near the stomach, were the seat of cancer in 32½ per cent. In Lange's 210 cases the cervical glands were affected in 4.3 per cent. In other statistics this percentage is much smaller. In nearly one-third of the cases there are secondary cancers in the liver. These may attain an enormous size in comparison with the tumor of the stomach. Cancer of the peritoneum and of the omentum is found in about one-fifth of the cases of gastric cancer. The spleen is rarely involved, except by continuous growth of a cancer of the fundus or in cases of widespread distribution of cancer through the aortic circulation. Cancer of the liver increases the liability to metastases in the lungs, but the latter may be present without any cancerous deposits in the liver. Secondary cancers may be present in the suprarenal capsules, the kidneys, the ovaries, the heart, the thoracic duct, the bones, the skin, etc. In an interesting case reported by Finlay90 the subcutaneous tissue of the trunk was thickly studded with small nodules, of which two were excised during life and found to be cylindrical epitheliomata. This led to the diagnosis of a primary tumor of the same nature in the stomach or in the intestine. At the autopsy was found a cylindrical epithelioma of the stomach which had not given rise to characteristic symptoms. Secondary cancer of the intestine is rare if the deposits in the peritoneal coat be excepted. Several cancerous ulcers or multiple cancerous nodules may be found along the intestinal tract, involving the mucous and the submucous coats.91 These metastases seem best explained by the theory of implantation of cancerous elements which have been carried from the primary growth in the stomach into the intestine. In some of the cases the idea of multiple primary cancers may also be entertained.
90 Trans. Path. Soc. London, vol. xxxiv. p. 102. Unfortunately, in Röseler's case of multiple skin-cancers with an ulcerated cancer of the stomach no microscopical examination of the skin-nodules was made. The interpretation of this case is therefore doubtful (Virchow's Archiv, Bd. 77, p. 372).
91 Cases in point are recorded by Wrany (loc. cit.), Blix (Virchow u. Hirsch's Jahresbericht, 1876, ii. p. 207), Lange, Katzenellenbogen, and Lebert.
It is not rare for gastric cancer to cause secondary deposits in the stomach itself. Sometimes it is difficult to decide which of two or more cancers in the stomach is the primary growth, as in Ripley's case of ulcerated cancer of the cardiac orifice with a similar growth around the pyloric orifice.92 It is probable that in very rare instances multiple primary cancers may develop in the stomach.
92 J. H. Ripley, Trans. N.Y. Path. Soc., vol. iv. p. 121. Maurizio has also reported a case of scirrhous cancer of the cardia with scirrhous cancer of the pylorus (Annal. univ. di Medicina, Oct., 1869). A similar case was observed by Barth (Gaz. hebdom., 1856, No. 24, p. 424).
Cancerous metastases are produced by the transportation of cancerous elements by the lymphatic current or by the blood-current. In a number of instances the portal vein or some of the branches which help to form it have been found plugged with a cancerous mass which may or may not be organized.93 The cancer in these cases has burst through the walls of the vessel into the lumen, where it may grow both in the direction and against the direction of the current. On serous surfaces, and probably also, although rarely, on mucous surfaces, secondary cancers may develop from cancerous particles detached from a parent tumor and scattered over the surface as a kind of seminium.
93 Cases of this kind have been reported with especial fulness by Spaeth (Virchow's Archiv, Bd. 35, p. 432), Acker (Deutsches Arch. f. kl. Med., Bd. 11, p. 173), and Audibert (De la Généralisation du Cancer de l'Estomac, Paris, Thesis, 1877).