Literature DB >> 30659478

Gastric cancer surgery: clinical outcomes and prognosis are influenced by perioperative blood transfusions.

Marica Grasso1, Giulia Pacella2, Nicola Sangiuliano3, Maurizio De Palma3, Alessandro Puzziello2.   

Abstract

Gastric cancer in patients is often associated with bleeding; when it occurs, especially in the presence of an anemia, a transfusion is necessary to avoid further deterioration of the patient's clinical state. The aim of this study was to evaluate the relationship between the administration of peri-operative transfusions due to the anemia or the clinical status and the post-operative clinical outcomes. 188 patients diagnosed with of gastric cancer were recruited at Surgery 2 of the Department of General and Specialist Surgery of the Tertiary Care Hospital "A. Cardarelli" of Naples. All patients had a total or a subtotal gastrectomy accompanied by D2 lymphectomy for gastric cancer. The clinical data most frequently associated with blood transfusion is the appearance of a post-operative infection (OR 2.26, 95% CI 0.87-5.79, P = 0.061). If the administration time of transfusion is considered, the clinical outcomes are different: preoperative transfusions showed a higher incidence of infections (OR 2.26, 95% CI 0.87-5.79, P = 0.061) and acute renal failure (OR 2.82, 95% CI 0.70-10.78, P = 0.078); patients who received intra or post-operative transfusions showed a prolonged hospitalization (OR 8.66, 95% CI 1.73-83.00, P = 0.002). The administration of blood products in the perioperative period is correlated in a statistically significant manner to the incidence of infections, acute renal failure and prolonged hospitalization; therefore, transfusions should be avoided unless clinically necessary and in particular intraoperative transfusions should be avoided because the immunomodulation effect linked to surgical stress may be enhanced hence worsening the prognosis.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Blood transfusion; Gastric cancer; Perioperative transfusion; Post-operative infection

Year:  2019        PMID: 30659478     DOI: 10.1007/s13304-019-00622-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Updates Surg        ISSN: 2038-131X


  1 in total

1.  Preoperative Plasma Fibrinogen and Serum Albumin Score Is an Independent Prognostic Factor for Resectable Stage II-III Gastric Cancer.

Authors:  Menghui Wu; Yuchen Pan; Zhifang Jia; Yueqi Wang; Na Yang; Jianfeng Mu; Tianyu Zhou; Yaohua Guo; Jing Jiang; Xueyuan Cao
Journal:  Dis Markers       Date:  2019-10-29       Impact factor: 3.434

  1 in total

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