Surgical approaches and outcomes in the treatment of gastric cancer Journal Article


Authors: Kim, H. J.; Karpeh, M. S.
Article Title: Surgical approaches and outcomes in the treatment of gastric cancer
Abstract: Resection with extended lymphadenectomy in obtaining local-regional control with negative margins remains the only potentially curative modality in the treatment of gastric cancer. Complete (RO) resections, along with depth of invasion and adequate nodal staging, remain the most important prognostic factors. Because current chemotherapy regimens have limited benefit in advanced disease, the effectiveness of local-regional modalities takes on greater significance. The extent of surgical resection varies with the size, depth, location of the primary tumor, and the stage of disease. Studying patterns of recurrent disease and elucidating the impact of positive margins have led to insights into the biology of the disease and the limitations of local-regional therapies. Considerable controversy surrounds the notion of what defines an adequate lymph node dissection (LND). The recommendation of routine extended (D2) lymphadenectomy (ELND) is difficult to justify based on available randomized studies, but ELND may benefit selected patients when performed by surgeons who can accomplish the dissection with acceptable morbidity/mortality rates. An extended LND results in improved staging, allowing standardization of prognostic factors and survival data worldwide. Patient selection remains critical, limiting the role of surgery in advanced disease and reserving aggressive surgical resection for patients with high curative potential. Copyright 2002, Elsevier Science (USA). All rights reserved.
Keywords: cancer chemotherapy; cancer survival; controlled study; treatment outcome; clinical trial; review; cancer recurrence; advanced cancer; cancer staging; antineoplastic agent; lymph node dissection; lymph nodes; treatment indication; controlled clinical trial; randomized controlled trial; morbidity; surgical approach; cancer invasion; surgeon; gastrectomy; surgical mortality; cancer control; stomach carcinoma; stomach neoplasms; digestive system surgical procedures; competence; gastric mucosa; humans; prognosis; human; priority journal
Journal Title: Seminars in Radiation Oncology
Volume: 12
Issue: 2
ISSN: 1053-4296
Publisher: Elsevier Inc.  
Date Published: 2002-04-01
Start Page: 162
End Page: 169
Language: English
PUBMED: 11979417
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI: 10.1053/srao.2002.30818
DOI/URL:
Notes: Export Date: 14 November 2014 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Martin S Karpeh
    98 Karpeh