| Literature DB >> 22059926 |
Roberto Cirocchi1, Eriberto Farinella, Stefano Trastulli, Davide Cavaliere, Piero Covarelli, Chiara Listorti, Jacopo Desiderio, Francesco Barberini, Nicola Avenia, Antonio Rulli, Giorgio Maria Verdecchia, Giuseppe Noya, Carlo Boselli.
Abstract
Primitive Gastrointestinal Lymphomas (PGIL) are uncommon tumours, although time-trend analyses have demonstrated an increase. The role of surgery in the management of lymphoproliferative diseases has changed over the past 40 years. Nowadays their management is centred on systemic treatments as chemo-/radiotherapy. Surgery is restricted to very selected indications, always discussed in a multidisciplinary setting. The aim of this systematic review is to evaluate the actual role of surgery in the treatment of PGIL. A systematic review of literature was conducted according to the recommendations of The Cochrane Collaboration. Main outcomes analysed were overall survival (OS) and disease free survival (DFS). There are currently 1 RCT and 4 non-randomised prospective controlled studies comparing surgical versus medical treatment for PGIL. Seven hundred and one patients were analysed, divided into two groups: 318 who underwent to surgery alone or associated with chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy (surgical group) versus 383 who were treated with chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy (medical group). Despite the OS at 10 years between surgical and medical groups did not show relevant differences, the DFS was significantly better in the medical group (P=0.00001). Accordingly a trend was noticed in the recurrence rate, which was lower in the medical group (6.06 vs. 8.57%); and an higher mortality was revealed in the surgical group (4.51% vs. 1.50%).The chemotherapy confirms its primary role in the management of PGIL as part of systemic treatment in the medical group. Surgery remains the treatment of choice in case of PGIL acutely complicated, although there is no evidence in literature regarding the utility of preventive surgery.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22059926 PMCID: PMC3229478 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7819-9-145
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 2.754
Figure 1Study selection flow chart.
Characteristics of the included studies
| Author/Year | Types of study | N° of total evaluated patients | Inclusion criteria | Surgical treatment +/- medical theraphy | Medical theraphy alone | Mean follow-up | Results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall survival | Event-free survival | |||||||
| Avilés et al. [ | RCT | 241 | Patients with low-grade gastric MALT lymphoma age < 70 yr old, no gender difference, ECOG status ≤2, immunodeficiency virus test negative, | 80 patients received surgery alone | 78 patients received only radiotherapy | 7, 5 years | 10 years | 10 years |
| Gobbi et al. [ | PNR | 154 | Patients who fulfilled Lewin's criteria for diagnosing PGL (stomach and intestinal). Low-grade MALT lymphomas were excluded from this study | 106 patients received | 48 patients received chemotherapy | NI | NI | NI |
| Popescu et al. [ | PNR | 37 | Patients with a histological diagnosis of intermediate or high-grade NHL according to the Working Formulation (WF) involving the stomach were included. Patients who received radiotherapy but no chemotherapy treatment were not included. | 13 Surgery and chemotherapy | 24 patients received chemotherapy alone | 53 months | 5 years | 5 years |
| Binn et al. [ | PNR | 84 | Patients with diffuse large B-cell | 40 patients received surgery plus chemotherapy | 44 patients received chemotherapy alone | 59 months | 5 years | 5 years |
| Koch et al. [ | PNR | 185 | Patients with all histological tips of gastric low and high grade lymphoma but only in stage I E and II E 1- 2. | 79 patients received | 106 patients received only radio- and/or chemotherapy | 52 months | 5 years | 5 years |
RCT = randomised clinical trial; PNR = prospective non randomised; NI = not indicated; S = surgery; R = radiotherapy; C = chemotherapy
Figure 2The overall survival at 10 years in patients with PGIL treated with chemo and/or radiotherapy versus the surgical approach associated with adjuvant treatments. Surgical Group (SG): surgery alone or associated with chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy. Medical Group (MG): chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy.
Figure 3The disease free survival at 10 years in patients with PGIL treated with chemo and/or radiotherapy versus the surgical approach associated with adjuvant treatments. Surgical Group (SG): surgery alone or associated with chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy. Medical Group (MG): chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy.
Figure 4The incidence of recurrences in patients with PGIL treated with chemo and/or radiotherapy versus the surgical approach associated with adjuvant treatments. Surgical Group (SG): surgery alone or associated with chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy. Medical Group (MG): chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy.
Figure 5The mortality in patients with recurrence from PGIL treated with chemo and/or radiotherapy versus the surgical approach associated with adjuvant treatments. Surgical Group (SG): surgery alone or associated with chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy. Medical Group (MG): chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy.
Figure 6The mortality in patients with PGIL treated with chemo and/or radiotherapy versus the surgical approach associated with adjuvant treatments. Surgical Group (SG): surgery alone or associated with chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy. Medical Group (MG): chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy.