Litcius/Paper detail

Prognostic factors of minimally invasive surgery for gastric cancer: Does robotic gastrectomy bring oncological benefit?

Masaya Nakauchi, Koichi Suda, Susumu Shibasaki, Kenichi Nakamura, Shinichi Kadoya, Kenji Kikuchi, Kazuki Inaba, Ichiro Uyama

2021World Journal of Gastroenterology40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Gastric cancer is the third leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide and surgical resection remains the sole curative treatment for gastric cancer. Minimally invasive gastrectomy including laparoscopic and robotic approaches has been increasingly used in a few decades. Thus far, only a few reports have investigated the oncological outcomes following minimally invasive gastrectomy. AIM: To determine the 5-year survival following minimally invasive gastrectomy for gastric cancer and identify prognostic predictors. METHODS: = 8), a total of 814 consecutive patients with primary gastric cancer who underwent minimally invasive R0 gastrectomy at our institution between 2009 and 2014 were retrospectively examined. Accordingly, 5-year overall and recurrence-free survival were analyzed using the Kaplan-Meier method with the log-rank test and Cox regression analyses, while factors associated with survival were determined using multivariate analysis. RESULTS: = 0.005). CONCLUSION: Age, ASA status, gastrectomy type, and pathological T and N status were prognostic factors of minimally invasive gastrectomy, with the robot approach possibly improving long-term outcomes of advanced gastric cancer.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineGastrectomyCancerRetrospective cohort studySurgical oncologySurgeryProportional hazards modelPathologicalInternal medicineSurvival rateGastroenterologyGeneral surgeryGastric Cancer Management and OutcomesGastrointestinal Tumor Research and TreatmentMultiple and Secondary Primary Cancers