Literature DB >> 33846934

The Discordance of Clinical and Pathologic Staging in Locally Advanced Gastric Adenocarcinoma.

Marianna V Papageorge1, Susanna W L de Geus1, Jian Zheng1, Alison P Woods1,2, Sing Chau Ng1, Michael R Cassidy1, David McAneny1, Jennifer F Tseng1, Teviah E Sachs3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Clinical staging guides decisions about optimal treatment sequence in patients with gastric cancer, although the preoperative accuracy is not strongly established. This study investigates concordance of clinical and pathologic stage as well as its impact on the survival of patients with gastric adenocarcinoma.
METHODS: Patients with clinical stage T2-4, N0, M0 gastric adenocarcinoma who underwent surgery without neoadjuvant therapy were identified from the National Cancer Database (2010-2015). The primary outcome was up-staging, defined as cT < pT, pN1-3, and/or pM1 (AJCC 7th edition). Multivariable logistic regression analysis was performed to predict up-staging. Survival analysis was performed using the Kaplan-Meier method.
RESULTS: In total, 2254 patients were identified. cTNM staging was discordant with pTNM staging in 65.6% of cases, with 50.4% up-staged and 15.2% down-staged. On multivariable logistic regression, younger age (OR 0.991, 95% CI 0.984-0.999, p=0.0188), male sex (versus female; OR 1.392, 95% CI 1.158-1.673, p=0.0004), poor or undifferentiated tumor grade (versus well differentiated or moderately differentiated; OR 2.399, 95% CI 1.987-2.896; p<0.0001), positive margin status (versus negative; OR 4.575, 95% CI 3.360-6.230; p<0.0001), and days from diagnosis to surgery (15-32 days versus ≤ 14 days; OR 1.411, 95% CI 1.098-1.814, p=0.0072) were predictive of up-staging. Patients who were up-staged had a decreased survival compared to patients who were accurately staged (median survival 27.9 months versus 67.6 months; log-rank p<0.0001).
CONCLUSION: This study found a substantial discordance between clinical and pathologic staging of resectable locally advanced gastric adenocarcinoma. These data support that patients may have more advanced disease at presentation than reflected in clinical staging and may benefit from improved diagnostic modalities and neoadjuvant chemotherapy.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Gastric adenocarcinoma; Neoadjuvant therapy; Staging

Year:  2021        PMID: 33846934     DOI: 10.1007/s11605-021-04993-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Gastrointest Surg        ISSN: 1091-255X            Impact factor:   3.452


  1 in total

1.  Neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy for esophageal/gastroesophageal carcinoma.

Authors:  Timothy A Platz; Steven J Nurkin; Mei Ka Fong; Adrienne Groman; Leayn Flaherty; Usha Malhotra; Charles M Levea; Sai Yendamuri; Graham W Warren; Hector R Nava; Kilian S May
Journal:  J Gastrointest Oncol       Date:  2013-06
  1 in total
  1 in total

1.  Body composition dynamics and impact on clinical outcome in gastric and gastro-esophageal junction cancer patients undergoing perioperative chemotherapy with the FLOT protocol.

Authors:  Florian Huemer; Stefan Hecht; Bernhard Scharinger; Verena Schlintl; Gabriel Rinnerthaler; Konstantin Schlick; Ronald Heregger; Thomas Melchardt; Angela Wimmer; Iris Mühlbacher; Oliver Owen Koch; Daniel Neureiter; Eckhard Klieser; Sara Seyedinia; Mohsen Beheshti; Richard Greil; Lukas Weiss
Journal:  J Cancer Res Clin Oncol       Date:  2022-07-21       Impact factor: 4.322

  1 in total

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