TY - JOUR
T1 - Extended lymph node dissection for gastric cancer
T2 - Results of a prospective, multi-centre analysis of morbidity and mortality in 118 consecutive cases
AU - Degiuli, Maurizio
AU - Sasako, Mitsuru
AU - Ponzetto, Antonio
AU - Allone, Tiziano
AU - Soldati, Tito
AU - Calgaro, Marco
AU - Balcet, Francesco
AU - Bussone, Riccardo
AU - Olivieri, Fabrizio
AU - Scaglione, Donatella
AU - Danese, Francesco
AU - Morino, Mario
AU - Calderini, Paolo
AU - Capussotti, Lorenzo
AU - Fronda, Gianruggero
AU - Garavoglia, Marcello
AU - Locatelli, Luigi
AU - Dellepiane, Mario
AU - Rossini, Francesco Paolo
AU - Calvo, Fabio
PY - 1997
Y1 - 1997
N2 - This study reports interim data on post-operative morbidity, hospital mortality and duration of hospital stay of Italian patients undergoing extended lymph-node dissection combined with a pancreas-preserving technique for gastric cancer. Of the 218 patients admitted to one of eight general and/or university hospitals in North Italy, 118 were enrolled in the trial. Eligible patients presented with proven primary adenocarcinoma of the stomach without clinical evidence of distant, peritoneal and/or liver metastasis, or metastasis in para-aortic and retropancreatic nodes at intraoperative biopsy. Patients underwent the extended procedure as described by the Japanese Research Society for the Study of Gastric Cancer, following the Maruyama pancreas-preserving technique. A strict quality control system was used to ensure the performance of a standard surgical treatment. A surgeon of the reference centre (M.D.), who stayed at the National Cancer Center Hospital in Tokyo to learn the D2 technique from a specialist Japanese surgeon, became the trial supervisor and assisted each surgeon in all the Italian participating centres. The patients were staged according both to the TNM system and to the General Rules for the Gastric Cancer Study in Surgery and Pathology. Post-operative surgical complications developed in 21 patients (17.8%). The non-surgical complication rate was 2.5%. Reoperation was necessary in six patients (5%), all of whom survived. The 30-day mortality rate for the eligible group was 2.5%. The overall hospital mortality was the same. Total gastrectomy was associated with a slightly higher operative mortality (4.5% vs 1.3%). Only one patient died from an anastomotic leak. The rate of leakages was higher after total than after distal gastrectomy (15.9 vs 5.4%); the association of splenectomy and pancreatectomy worsened the morbidity rate. D2 lymphadenectomy with pancreas-preserving technique, when performed at experienced centres, seems a feasible and safe technique for the radical treatment of gastric cancer in selected Western patients.
AB - This study reports interim data on post-operative morbidity, hospital mortality and duration of hospital stay of Italian patients undergoing extended lymph-node dissection combined with a pancreas-preserving technique for gastric cancer. Of the 218 patients admitted to one of eight general and/or university hospitals in North Italy, 118 were enrolled in the trial. Eligible patients presented with proven primary adenocarcinoma of the stomach without clinical evidence of distant, peritoneal and/or liver metastasis, or metastasis in para-aortic and retropancreatic nodes at intraoperative biopsy. Patients underwent the extended procedure as described by the Japanese Research Society for the Study of Gastric Cancer, following the Maruyama pancreas-preserving technique. A strict quality control system was used to ensure the performance of a standard surgical treatment. A surgeon of the reference centre (M.D.), who stayed at the National Cancer Center Hospital in Tokyo to learn the D2 technique from a specialist Japanese surgeon, became the trial supervisor and assisted each surgeon in all the Italian participating centres. The patients were staged according both to the TNM system and to the General Rules for the Gastric Cancer Study in Surgery and Pathology. Post-operative surgical complications developed in 21 patients (17.8%). The non-surgical complication rate was 2.5%. Reoperation was necessary in six patients (5%), all of whom survived. The 30-day mortality rate for the eligible group was 2.5%. The overall hospital mortality was the same. Total gastrectomy was associated with a slightly higher operative mortality (4.5% vs 1.3%). Only one patient died from an anastomotic leak. The rate of leakages was higher after total than after distal gastrectomy (15.9 vs 5.4%); the association of splenectomy and pancreatectomy worsened the morbidity rate. D2 lymphadenectomy with pancreas-preserving technique, when performed at experienced centres, seems a feasible and safe technique for the radical treatment of gastric cancer in selected Western patients.
KW - Extended lymph node dissection
KW - Gastric cancer
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=12644286569&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/S0748-7983(97)90696-X
DO - 10.1016/S0748-7983(97)90696-X
M3 - Article
SN - 0748-7983
VL - 23
SP - 310
EP - 314
JO - European Journal of Surgical Oncology
JF - European Journal of Surgical Oncology
IS - 4
ER -