Artigo Revisado por pares

Clinicopathological features, surgical management, and disease outcome of perforated gastric cancer

2005; Wiley; Volume: 91; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1002/jso.20307

ISSN

1096-9098

Autores

Shyh‐Chuan Jwo, Rong‐Nan Chien, Tzu‐Chien Chao, Huang‐Yang Chen, Chin‐Yew Lin,

Tópico(s)

Gastrointestinal Tumor Research and Treatment

Resumo

Perforated gastric cancer is rare and generally not diagnosed preoperatively or intraoperatively, if a frozen section is unavailable. Therefore, the elucidation of its clinicopathological features and disease outcomes will help surgeons manage perforated gastric cancer.The clinicopathological features, surgical management, and disease outcomes of 13 patients with perforated gastric cancer from March 1989 to May 2003 were retrospectively analyzed. Disease outcomes were analyzed in-depth based on tumor stage, depth of tumor invasion, operative curability, and three treatment groups.All 13 patients (median age of 72 years) received emergent laparotomy. Malignant gastric perforation was diagnosed intraoperatively in eight (61.5%) patients. Four patients whose frozen sections exhibited perforated gastric cancer underwent radical surgery with curative intent and were assigned to Group 1. Another four patients with overt distal metastases underwent palliative surgery and were assigned to Group 2. The remaining five patients were misdiagnosed as having benign gastric perforation and underwent local surgery; these patients were assigned to Group 3. All patients received follow-up for a median of 26 months. The survival rates for Stage I disease (P = 0.0342), T1/T2 tumors (P = 0.0342), and curative resection (P = 0.0012) significantly exceeded those of Stage III/IV, T3/T4 tumors, and non-curative resection. Additionally, the survival rates of Group 1 (P = 0.0067) and Group 3 (P = 0.0067) significantly exceeded those of Group 2. Stepwise logistic regression analysis revealed no significant predictor of prognosis.In resectable cases, one-stage radical gastrectomy with possible extensive lymphadenectomy should be encouraged if conditions allow. In cases of misdiagnosis, non-radical local surgery with curative resection is sufficient to treat early-stage cancer.

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