학술논문

Original article: role of adjuvant chemotherapy in a perioperative chemotherapy regimen for gastric cancer.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
BMC Cancer. 8/18/2016, Vol. 16, p1-11. 11p. 1 Diagram, 3 Charts, 3 Graphs.
Subject
*STOMACH cancer treatment
*CANCER chemotherapy
*ADJUVANT treatment of cancer
*GASTRECTOMY
*LYMPHADENECTOMY
*PERIOPERATIVE care
*ANTINEOPLASTIC agents
*COMBINED modality therapy
*SURGICAL excision
*LYMPH node surgery
*STOMACH tumors
*SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry)
*TREATMENT effectiveness
ONCOLOGIC surgery complications
Language
ISSN
1471-2407
Abstract
Background: Multimodal treatment strategies - perioperative chemotherapy (CTx) and radical surgery - are currently accepted as treatment standard for locally advanced gastric cancer. However, the role of adjuvant postoperative CTx (postCTx) in addition to neoadjuvant preoperative CTx (preCTx) in this setting remains controversial.Methods: Between 4/2006 and 12/2013, 116 patients with locally advanced gastric cancer were treated with preCTx. 72 patients (62 %), in whom complete tumor resection (R0, subtotal/total gastrectomy with D2-lymphadenectomy) was achieved, were divided into two groups, one of which receiving adjuvant therapy (n = 52) and one without (n = 20). These groups were analyzed with regard to survival and exclusion criteria for adjuvant therapy.Results: Postoperative complications, as well as their severity grade, did not correlate with fewer postCTx cycles administered (p = n.s.). Long-term survival was shorter in patients receiving postCTx in comparison to patients without postCTx, but did not show statistical significance. In per protocol analysis by excluding two patients with perioperative death, a shorter 3-year survival rate was observed in patients receiving postCTx compared to patients without postCTx (3-year survival: 71.2 % postCTx group vs. 90.0 % non-postCTx group; p = 0.038).Conclusion: These results appear contradicting to the anticipated outcome. While speculative, they question the value of post-CTx. Prospectively randomized studies are needed to elucidate the role of postCTx. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]