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Gastric Carcinoma

75

Citations

7

References

1983

Year

Abstract

Data on 164 patients treated at the Cleveland Clinic with gastric adenocarcinoma during the ten year period 1970 to 1980 was analyzed. Fiberoptic esophagogastroduodenoscopy was introduced as a routine diagnostic modality during this time and yielded a positive tissue diagnosis in 86% of patients in this series. Laparotomy was performed on 150 patients; 49 patients (30%) were biopsied only, 19 (12%) were bypassed for palliation, and 82 (58%) underwent gastrectomy. Of the latter group, only 45 patients (27%) were resected for cure. The overall operative mortality rate was 6%. All patients were staged according to the International TNM classification (stage I--10%, II--24%, III--12%, and IV--53%). Survival at 5 years was influenced by tumor location and extent of gastric resection but was most significantly related to stage of disease at operation (stage I--65%, II--22%, III--5%, and IV--0%; p less than 0.0001) and to the status of regional nodes (positive--17%, negative--56%; p less than 0.005). Despite the routine use of fiberoptic endoscopy, the majority of gastric cancers were advanced at diagnosis and their prognosis remains discouraging. Improvement of results will require a more aggressive approach to the endoscopic investigation of upper gastrointestinal symptoms and earlier surgical intervention.

References

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