GASTRIC CANCER IN ASIA: PROGRESS AND CONTROVERSIES IN SURGICAL MANAGEMENT
- 1 March 1998
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Anz Journal of Surgery
- Vol. 68 (3) , 172-179
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1445-2197.1998.tb04739.x
Abstract
Considerable controversy surrounds the management of gastric cancer and this has largely overshadowed recent progress in our under- standing of the epidemiology and molecular pathogenesis of the disease, and improvements in diagnostic and staging techniques. Differences identifiable in the molecular pathogenesis of the 'intestinal' and 'diffuse' types of gastric cancer may help to untravel the biological behaviour of variants and ultimately influence therapeutic strategies. Endoscopic ultrasound is well established as being accurate for T staging and the introduction of laparoscopy, with or without ultrasound, is obviating unnecessary laparotomy in non bleeding, non-obstructed patients. Controversies in surgery encompass the role of laparoscopic surgery in early gastric cancer, the extent of lymphadenectomy including para-aortic nodal dissection, resection of en bloc contiguous organ involvement, pancreatosplenectomy, left upper abdominal evisceration, and modes of reconstruction (pylorus-preserving gastrectomy, pouch formation) to enhance quality of life. Whereas adjuvant chemotherapy does not impact favourably on survival, emphasis has now shifted to neoadjuvant (induction) chemotherapy to downstage the disease. Preoperative regional chemotherapy and intra-operative hyperthermic chemotherapy or irradiation may prove to be of benefit in patients with resectable disease, but some scepticism still exists as to the usefulness of biological response modifiers (e.g. OK432, PSK) for adjuvant treatment. Ethical issues relating to cultural differences in Asia sometimes mitigate against adequate trial design (e.g, a surgery-alone control group or a no adjuvant therapy treatment group may be considered inappropriate) and this has understandably hindered acceptance in Western countries of the value of current management practices in Asia. These issues and the need for ongoing well- conducted randomized trials with prospective subset analysis are now being addressed.link_to_subscribed_fulltexKeywords
This publication has 58 references indexed in Scilit:
- Restorative caecogastroplasty reconstruction after pylorus-preserving near-total gastrectomy: A preliminary studyBritish Journal of Surgery, 1997
- GASTRIC CARCINOMA WITH SYNCHRONOUS LIVER METASTASES: PALLIATIVE GASTRECTOMY OR NOT?Anz Journal of Surgery, 1995
- Lymph node dissection in gastric cancerBritish Journal of Surgery, 1995
- Laparoscopic Minilaparotomy Billroth I Gastrectomy with Extraperigastric Lymphadenectomy for Early Gastric Cancer Using an Abdominal Wall-Lifting MethodJournal of Laparoendoscopic Surgery, 1995
- Treatment of advanced pancreatic cancer with regional chemotherapy plus hemofiltrationSeminars in Surgical Oncology, 1995
- Intraperitoneal thermochemotherapy for prevention of peritoneal recurrence of gastric cancer. Final results of a randomized controlled studyCancer, 1994
- Experience with Laparoscopic Management of Early Gastric CancerSurgical Laparoscopy, Endoscopy & Percutaneous Techniques, 1992
- Antitumor Effect of PSK at a Distant Site: Inductions of Interleukin‐8‐like Factor and Macrophage Chemotactic Factor in Murine TumorJapanese Journal of Cancer Research, 1990
- Results of surgery for gastric cancer and effect of adjuvant mitomycin C on cancer recurrenceWorld Journal of Surgery, 1977
- A study of survival in patients with stomach cancer treated by a combination of preoperative intra-arterial infusion therapy and surgeryCancer, 1976