A biopsy means that your doctor takes out small pieces of abnormal tissue from your stomach. A pathologist does tests on the tissue samples and looks at them under a microscope. It's the only way to know if a change is stomach cancer. But a biopsy can also show other problems. These can include an H. pylori bacterial infection, other diseases besides cancer, or another type of cancer called a lymphoma.
A biopsy is needed to confirm a diagnosis of stomach cancer.
Endoscopic stomach biopsy
This is the most common type of biopsy used. Before the procedure, you're given medicine to help you relax and a numbing medicine is sprayed into your throat. It helps prevent gagging. Then your doctor puts a long, thin, flexible tube called an endoscope into your mouth. It's guided down your esophagus and into your stomach. Your doctor looks at the lining of your stomach with the scope. Tools can be passed through the scope to take tissue samples for a biopsy from any abnormal areas.
Endoscopic ultrasound-guided needle biopsy
This procedure may be used if your doctor thinks the cancer is deeper in the wall of your stomach (not just in the stomach lining).
This test also uses an endoscope. You'll be given medicine to help you relax. A numbing medicine is sprayed into your throat to help prevent gagging. The endoscope is then put into your mouth and guided into your stomach. This scope has a special ultrasound tool at the tip. The ultrasound tip is put against your stomach wall to create images.
Your doctor looks at your stomach lining with the scope. They can also see images of the deeper layers of your stomach, lymph nodes, and other nearby tissues. If abnormal changes in the tissues are seen, your doctor will pass a thin, hollow needle through the scope into the abnormal tissue. This needle is used to take out tiny pieces of tissue to test in the lab.