Role of prophylactic HIPEC in non-metastatic, serosa-invasive gastric cancer: a literature review.
Aditya R KunteAamir M ParrayManish S BhandareSohan Lal SolankiPublished in: Pleura and peritoneum (2022)
The role of prophylactic hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (p-HIPEC) in serosa invasive gastric cancers without gross or microscopic peritoneal disease, to reduce the rate of peritoneal relapse is an area of ongoing research. Although p-HIPEC is effective in reducing the rate of peritoneal relapse and improving disease free and overall survival with or without adjuvant chemotherapy, when added to curative surgery in locally advanced, non-metastatic gastric cancers, the available literature is at best, heterogeneous, centre-specific and skewed. Apart from that, variations in the systemic therapy used, and the presence of the associated nodal disease further complicate this picture. To evaluate the role of p-HIPEC the PubMed, Cochrane central register of clinical trials, and the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) meeting library were searched with the search terms, "gastric", "cancer", "hyperthermic", "intraperitoneal", "chemotherapy", prophylactic", "HIPEC" in various combinations, and a critical review of the available evidence was done. Although p-HIPEC is a promising therapy in the management of locally advanced gastric cancers, the current evidence is insufficient to recommend its inclusion into routine clinical practice. Future research should be directed towards identification of the appropriate patient subset and towards redefining its role with current peri-operative systemic therapies.
Keyphrases
- locally advanced
- squamous cell carcinoma
- rectal cancer
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- clinical practice
- clinical trial
- radiation therapy
- phase ii study
- small cell lung cancer
- systematic review
- minimally invasive
- free survival
- stem cells
- coronary artery disease
- palliative care
- randomized controlled trial
- acute coronary syndrome
- lymph node
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- mesenchymal stem cells
- coronary artery bypass
- drug induced
- phase ii
- replacement therapy
- childhood cancer