Litcius/Paper detail

Short and long‐term outcomes of prophylactic total gastrectomy in 54 consecutive individuals with germline pathogenic mutations in the <i>CDH1</i> gene

Mason Stillman, Nicole Kusche, Sabrina Toledano, Kimberly J. Hilfrank, Changhwan Yoon, Joel Gabre, Sheila D. Rustgi, Chin Hur, Fay Kastrinos, Sandra Ryeom, Sam S. Yoon

2022Journal of Surgical Oncology14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Germline mutation of CDH1 is rare and leads to hereditary diffuse gastric cancer (DGC). METHODS: Patients (pts) with CDH1 mutation who underwent multidisciplinary counseling followed by open prophylactic total gastrectomy (PTG) by a single surgeon were reviewed. RESULTS: Fifty-four pts with a median age of 41 years (16-70 years) underwent PTG between 2006 and 2021. Median operative time was 161 min, and median hospital stay was 7 days (range 6-12). There were 5 complications (9.2%) within 30 days, and two complications (pulmonary embolism and pancreatitis) required readmission. There were no anastomotic leaks. The pathologic analysis of the first 10 pts included the entire gastric mucosa, revealing a median of 15 foci of DGC (range 5-136). The subsequent 44 pts with more limited analysis had a median of 2 foci (range 0-5), and two pts (3.7%) had no foci identified. Median maximum weight loss was 19%. In long-term follow-up (median 4.6 years) of 20 pts, median global QOL was 2.0 (very good), the majority had persistent difficulty with certain foods or liquids, and all stated they would again elect PTG over surveillance endoscopy. CONCLUSIONS: PTG can be performed safely at high-volume referral centers with very good QOL but nutritional sequelae persist.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineSurgeryGermline mutationGastrectomyCancerGastroenterologyInternal medicineMutationChemistryBiochemistryGeneWnt/β-catenin signaling in development and cancerHelicobacter pylori-related gastroenterology studiesSkin and Cellular Biology Research