1. Perioperative, short-, and long-term outcomes of gastric cancer surgery: Propensity score-matched analysis of patients with or without prior solid organ transplantation.
- Author
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Kim DG, Seo WJ, Cho M, Kim YM, Huh KH, Cheong JH, Hyung WJ, Kim MS, and Kim HI
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Blood Loss, Surgical, Case-Control Studies, Cause of Death, Female, Heart Transplantation, Humans, Kidney Transplantation, Liver Transplantation, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Operative Time, Pain, Postoperative, Propensity Score, Republic of Korea, Stomach Neoplasms pathology, Gastrectomy, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care, Stomach Neoplasms surgery, Transplant Recipients
- Abstract
Background: Details of perioperative outcomes and survival after gastric cancer surgery in prior transplant recipients have received minimal research attention., Methods: We performed an observational cohort study using the database of 20,147 gastric cancer patients who underwent gastrectomy at a single gastric cancer center in Korea. Forty-one solid organ recipients [kidney (n = 35), liver (n = 5), or heart (n = 1)] were matched with 205 controls using propensity score matching., Results: Operation time, blood loss, and postoperative pain were similar between groups. Short-term complication rates were similar between transplantation and control groups (22.0% vs. 20.1%, P = 0.777). Transplantation group patients with stage 1 gastric cancer experienced no recurrence, while those with stage 2/3 cancer had significantly higher recurrence risk compared to the controls (P = 0.049). For patients with stage 1 cancer, the transplantation group had a significantly higher rate of non-gastric cancer-related deaths compared to the controls (19.2% vs. 1.4%, P = 0.001). For those with stage 2/3 cancer, significantly lower proportion of the transplantation group received adjuvant chemotherapy compared to the control group (26.7% vs. 80.3%, P < 0.001). The transplantation group had a higher (albeit not statistically significant) rate of gastric cancer-related deaths compared to the controls (40.0% vs. 18.0%, P = 0.087)., Conclusion: Transplant recipients and non-transplant recipients exhibited similar perioperative and short-term outcomes after gastric cancer surgery. From long-term outcome analyses, we suggest active surveillance for non-gastric cancer-related deaths in patients with early gastric cancer, as well as strict oncologic care in patients with advanced cancer, as effective strategies for transplant recipients., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare no conflict of interests., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd, BASO ~ The Association for Cancer Surgery, and the European Society of Surgical Oncology. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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