Is there a role for treatment-oriented surgery in stage IV gastric cancer? A systematic review.
Sarah MolfinoZeno BallariniFederico GhezaNazario PortolaniGian Luca BaiocchiPublished in: Updates in surgery (2018)
To analyze the available evidence on the role of treatment-oriented surgery in stage IV gastric cancer (metastatic disease), a systematic literature search was undertaken using Medline, Embase, Cochrane, and Web-of-Science libraries. The search was not restricted to articles published within a given year range. Articles written in English language (or with abstracts written in English) were considered. All references in the chosen articles were further screened to find additional relevant publications. Both clinical series and literature reviews were included. Stage IV gastric cancer is classified into four subcategories: positive peritoneal cytology without clear macroscopic peritoneal involvement (surgery is usually performed in these cases); gross appearance peritoneal carcinomatosis [surgery, eventually with hyperthermic intraoperative peritoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) may be considered in very selected cases with limited PCI]; nodal metastases outside the loco-regional nodes (surgery may not be denied for metastatic nodes in stations 13 and 16); and hematogenous metastases (surgery should be performed in selected cases with liver metastases suitable to R0 resection). The analysis incorporated the new biological classification of stage IV gastric cancer recently proposed by Japanese researchers (Yoshida et al. in Gastric Cancer 19:329-338. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10120-015-0575-z , 2015) into the four aforementioned subcategories to make the comparison of the issues discussed meaningful. The take home message from the existing literature is that treatment-oriented surgery may be performed in a significant proportion of patients with stage IV gastric cancer.
Keyphrases
- minimally invasive
- coronary artery bypass
- surgical site infection
- systematic review
- squamous cell carcinoma
- small cell lung cancer
- machine learning
- healthcare
- public health
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- randomized controlled trial
- autism spectrum disorder
- liver metastases
- early stage
- st elevation myocardial infarction
- rectal cancer