Prognostic factors in a series of 297 patients with gastric adenocarcinoma undergoing surgical resection

Author:

Sánchez-Bueno F1,Garcia-Marcilla J A1,Perez-Flores D2,Pérez-Abad J M1,Vicente R1,Aranda F1,Ramirez P1,Parrilla P1

Affiliation:

1. Department of General Surgery, ‘Virgen de la Arrixaca’ University Hospital, Murcia, Spain

2. Department of Medical Statistics, University of Murcia, Murcia, Spain

Abstract

Abstract Background Gastric cancer has a poor prognosis. The aim of this study was to determine the influence of several clinicopathological variables on outcome in a series of 297 Western patients undergoing surgical resection for gastric adenocarcinoma. Methods The results were analysed retrospectively and prognostic factors were identified in a univariate and Cox proportional hazards regression model. Mean patient age at the time of operation was 61·9 years; 65·7 per cent were men. Mean follow-up was 7·8 (range 1–15) years. Of the 297 patients undergoing surgery, 70 per cent had subtotal gastrectomy, 26·3 per cent underwent total gastrectomy and 3·7 per cent had proximal gastrectomy. Results The overall survival rate was 38·9 per cent at 5 years. In the univariate analysis, survival-related factors were weight loss (P < 0·05), abdominal mass (P < 0·01), dysphagia (P < 0·001), type of gastrectomy (subtotal gastrectomy versus total gastrectomy, P < 0·001), intention of resection (curative versus palliative resection, P < 0·001), tumour site (P < 0·001), histopathological grade (low versus high grade, P < 0·05), tumour diameter less than 3 cm (P < 0·001), degree of gastric wall invasion (P < 0·001), degree of lymph node invasion (P < 0·001) and stage of the neoplasia (P < 0·001). Other variables had no significant influence. In the multivariate analysis, degree of gastric wall invasion, lymph node invasion, tumour size and dysphagia at presentation were the only independent prognostic variables. Conclusion From these data it was possible to derive a prognostic index with which patients could be classified as at low, intermediate or high risk.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Surgery

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