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Survival times are similar among patients with peritoneal, hematogenous, and nodal recurrences after curative resections for gastric cancer

Authors :
Koichi Sawaki
Mitsuro Kanda
Seiji Ito
Yoshinari Mochizuki
Hitoshi Teramoto
Kiyoshi Ishigure
Toshifumi Murai
Takahiro Asada
Akiharu Ishiyama
Hidenobu Matsushita
Chie Tanaka
Daisuke Kobayashi
Michitaka Fujiwara
Kenta Murotani
Yasuhiro Kodera
Source :
Cancer Medicine, Vol 9, Iss 15, Pp 5392-5399 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

Abstract Background The three dominant recurrence patterns of gastric cancer are peritoneal, hematogenous, and nodal recurrence. Correlation between initial recurrence site and prognosis is poorly understood, particularly after standardization of postoperative S‐1 adjuvant chemotherapy. Methods We analyzed a multi‐institutional database of 3484 patients who underwent gastrectomy for gastric cancer between 2010 and 2014. Patients who experienced recurrences after curative gastrectomy classified into peritoneal, hematogenous, or nodal recurrence groups, according to their initial recurrence sites, and their prognoses were compared. Results We included 313 patients in the analysis, of whom 190 patients (63%) were treated with postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy. Pathological disease states were stage I: n = 20 (6%), stage II: n = 62 (20%), and stage III: n = 231 (74%). Patients were categorized into groups by peritoneal (n = 127), hematogenous (n = 123), and nodal (n = 63) recurrence. The peritoneal recurrence group tended to have longer recurrence‐free survival, but shorter post‐recurrence survival, than the other two groups. Median disease‐specific survival after curative resection by group were peritoneal: 25.8 months, hematogenous: 29.0 months, and nodal: 27.8 months (peritoneal vs hematogenous, P = .152; hematogenous vs nodal, P = .955; peritoneal vs nodal, P = .213). Conclusions Prognoses after curative resection for gastric cancer were similar among patients with peritoneal, hematogenous, or nodal recurrences.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20457634
Volume :
9
Issue :
15
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Cancer Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.9122ed3a0016496f8bbe34defe58de67
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.3208