Survival benefit of gastrectomy ± metastasectomy in patients with metastatic gastric cancer receiving chemotherapy

Background This study was performed to investigate the role of surgery in patients with gastric cancer and distant metastases who had received systemic chemotherapy. Methods Patients with newly diagnosed gastric cancer and synchronous distant metastases who had received chemotherapy ( n  = 274) were...

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Veröffentlicht in:Gastric cancer : official journal of the International Gastric Cancer Association and the Japanese Gastric Cancer Association 2011-06, Vol.14 (2), p.130-138
Hauptverfasser: Kim, Ki Hwan, Lee, Keun-Wook, Baek, Sun Kyung, Chang, Hye Jung, Kim, Yu Jung, Park, Do Joong, Kim, Jee Hyun, Kim, Hyung-Ho, Lee, Jong Seok
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background This study was performed to investigate the role of surgery in patients with gastric cancer and distant metastases who had received systemic chemotherapy. Methods Patients with newly diagnosed gastric cancer and synchronous distant metastases who had received chemotherapy ( n  = 274) were categorized into 3 groups according to the surgical treatment rendered: complete gross resection of both primary and metastatic sites (group A; n  = 42); debulking gastrectomy (group B; n  = 47); and chemotherapy without debulking (group C; n  = 185). Results The median overall survival of all patients was 11.8 months. The median overall survival and 3-year survival rates were 28.0, 15.5, and 9.0 months and 42.8, 8.1, and 3.5% in groups A, B, and C, respectively. In group A, patients with peritoneal seeding, intra-abdominal distant lymph nodes, or ovarian or hepatic metastases underwent complete gross resection, and 12 (29%) were disease-free at the time of the last analysis (median follow-up duration, 29.1 months). On multivariate analysis, the adjusted hazard ratios for death were 0.27 ( P  
ISSN:1436-3291
1436-3305
DOI:10.1007/s10120-011-0015-7