Title of article
Surgical treatment of gastric cancer invading the oesophagus
Author/Authors
F. Bozzetti، نويسنده , , P. Bignami، نويسنده , , L. Bertario، نويسنده , , S. Fissi، نويسنده , , M. Eboli، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Pages
5
From page
810
To page
814
Abstract
Introduction There is controversy regarding which type of surgical treatment is most appropriate for upper gastric cancer invading the oesophagus. Methods A review of the pertinent literature was carried out regarding oesophageal involvement in gastric cancer. Results Invasion of the oesophagus occurred in 26–63% of Western surgical series. It was more frequent in Borrmann IV type, linitis plastica, pT3–pT4, diffuse type by Lauren, N+ or tumours exceeding 5 cm in diameter. Lymphatic tumour spread was caudad (coeliac nodes, hepatoduodenal nodes, paraortic nodes) but mediastinal nodes were also involved if tumour growth in the oesophagus exceeded 3 cm or if there was transmural oesophageal infiltration. In Western countries there was less than 30% 5-year survival and no long-term survivors when hepatoduodenal or mediastinal nodes were metastatic. Mediastinal dissection through thoracotomy did not provide any benefit. Conclusions A rational approach involves total gastrectomy plus partial oesophagectomy. Abdominal transhiatal resection may be performed in the case of a localized, non-infiltrating tumour and oesophageal involvement <2 cm. However, infiltrating, poorly differentiated or Borrmann III–IV tumours require a right thoracotomy to achieve a longer margin of clearance. When oesophageal involvement is >3 cm, or hepatoduodenal or mediastinal nodes are positive, no surgical procedure is curative and the literature demonstrates that extended aggressive surgery has no benefits.
Keywords
cancer of proximal stomach
Journal title
European Journal of Surgical Oncology
Serial Year
2000
Journal title
European Journal of Surgical Oncology
Record number
510300
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