| Literature DB >> 26394879 |
Eva Fuentes1, Rima Ahmad1, Theodore S Hong2, Jeffrey W Clark3, Eunice L Kwak3, David W Rattner1, John T Mullen4.
Abstract
Delayed recovery after gastrectomy may preclude the administration of adjuvant therapy in a significant percentage of patients who undergo elective gastrectomy as the initial therapy for gastric cancer. Clinicopathologic and treatment variables of 155 patients undergoing potentially curative gastrectomy for stages Ib-IIIc gastric adenocarcinoma from 2001 to 2014 were analyzed, and rates of receipt of chemotherapy and radiotherapy in patients treated with either a surgery-first approach (SURG) or neoadjuvant therapy followed by surgery followed by postoperative therapy (PERIOP) were compared. SURG patients (n = 93) were older and more likely to have distal tumors and to undergo distal gastrectomy and D1 lymphadenectomy than PERIOP patients (n = 62). The distribution of ASA scores was similar between groups. SURG patients were less likely than PERIOP patients to complete at least one cycle of chemotherapy (56 vs 100%, P = 0.001) and all recommended chemotherapy and radiation therapy (44 vs 66%, P = 0.013). These findings were consistent for SURG patients treated during different time periods throughout the study and for patients of poorer performance status. A significantly higher percentage of gastric cancer patients treated with perioperative chemotherapy receive some or all of the recommended components of multimodality therapy than patients treated with a surgery-first approach.Entities:
Keywords: Adjuvant therapy completion; Gastric cancer; Perioperative chemotherapy; Surgery first
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26394879 DOI: 10.1007/s11605-015-2954-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gastrointest Surg ISSN: 1091-255X Impact factor: 3.452