The influence of short‐term postoperative outcomes on overall survival after gastric cancer surgery

Author:

D'Souza Joel1ORCID,McCombie Andrew1ORCID,Roberts Ross1

Affiliation:

1. Department of General Surgery Te Whatu Ora ‐ Waitaha Canterbury Christchurch New Zealand

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundGastrectomy with lymphadenectomy in combination with perioperative chemotherapy is the cornerstone of modern curative treatment for gastric adenocarcinoma. The primary objective of this study was to assess the influence of textbook outcome, postoperative complications, and readmission on survival in patients who underwent gastric cancer surgery.MethodsConsecutive patients who underwent curative and prophylactic gastric resections from 2014 to 2022 at Christchurch Hospital were identified from the hospital database. Multivariable analyses were performed to assess risk factors for each postoperative outcome. A survival analysis was performed to evaluate the influence of these outcomes on overall survival.ResultsSeventy‐seven patients underwent a gastric resection during the study period. Thirteen were prophylactic resections for E‐cadherin gene mutations and 64 were for malignancy. The overall postoperative complication rate was 34%, with an anastomotic leak rate of 8% (n = 6). The 30‐day readmission rate, 30‐day mortality rate and 90‐day mortality rate were 17%, 1%, and 5% respectively. No sociodemographic differences were identified in each outcome. An increasing day‐4 CRP trajectory was observed in patients with an anastomotic leak. Postoperative complications and nodal disease were independent prognostic factors for reduced survival.ConclusionsTextbook outcome, postoperative complications, and readmission are validated quality performance indicators of gastric cancer surgery. Postoperative complications are associated with poor overall survival independent of severity or type. The underlying mechanisms of this influence remain elusive. The aggressive biology of gastric cancer, combined with the surgical morbidity and its negative influence on survival, highlights the importance of ongoing quality improvement.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine,Surgery

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