Publication | Closed Access
Palliative surgery for gastric cancer
106
Citations
11
References
1988
Year
Palliative CareSurgical OncologyBirmingham Cancer RegistryGastrointestinal OncologyBest SurvivalMedicineGastroenterologyVisceral SurgeryGastric CarcinomaSurgeryGastric CancerUpper Gastrointestinal SurgeryOncologyRadiation OncologyCancer Research
Most patients with gastric carcinoma have a disease that is too advanced for radical surgery. A Review was made of 13,175 cases of gastric carcinoma registered at the Birmingham Cancer Registry during the period of 1960-1969. Of the patients, 79.6% had disease that was not radically resected, and few of these patients survived to 2 years. Those who had a palliative resection or bypass had the lowest 30-day mortality rate when compared to all other palliative measures (P less than 0.001). Furthermore, palliative resection gave the best survival in the presence of both locally advanced and metastatic disease (P less than 0.001). This suggests that the best palliative procedure for those with a disease unsuitable for radical surgery is a resection.
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