Affiliation:
1. Department of Surgery Kyoto University Hospital Kyoto Japan
2. Department of Patient Safety Kyoto University Hospital Kyoto Japan
3. Department of Metabolism and Clinical Nutrition Kyoto University Hospital Kyoto Japan
Abstract
AbstractPurposeLoss of skeletal muscle mass after gastrectomy for gastric cancer leads to decreased quality of life and poor postoperative survival. However, few studies have examined the postoperative loss of skeletal muscle mass following minimally invasive gastrectomy. This study investigated the impact of minimally invasive total gastrectomy (MI‐TG) on changes in skeletal muscle mass during the early postoperative period.MethodsPatients who underwent MI‐TG or minimally invasive distal or proximal gastrectomy (MI‐nonTG) for cStage I‐III gastric cancer were retrospectively analyzed (n = 58 vs. 182). Their body composition was measured before surgery and 2 months after surgery. Multivariable linear regression analysis was performed to clarify the impact of the surgical procedure on skeletal muscle index changes using clinically relevant covariates.ResultsSkeletal muscle mass decreased more in the MI‐TG group than in the MI‐nonTG group (median [interquartile range]; −5.9% [−10.6, −3.7] vs −4.5% [−7.3, −1.9], P = 0.004). In multivariable linear regression analysis using clinically relevant covariates, MI‐TG was an independent risk factor for postoperative loss of skeletal muscle mass (coefficient − 2.6%, 95% CI −4.5 to −0.68, P = 0.008).ConclusionsTotal gastrectomy was a risk factor for loss of skeletal muscle mass during the early postoperative period. If oncologically feasible, proximal or distal gastrectomy with a small remnant stomach should be considered.
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