J Korean Gastric Cancer Assoc.  2007 Jun;7(2):74-81.

Total Gastrectomy with Distal Pancreatico-splenectomy for Treating Locally Advanced Gastric Cancer

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Surgery, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul, Korea. kimwook@catholic.ac.kr
  • 2Department of Surgery, Il-Dong Armed Forces Hospital, Bucheon, Korea.

Abstract

PURPOSE: Routine pancreatico-splenectomy with total gastrectomy should no longer be considered as the standard surgical procedure for gastric cancer because of the lack of proven surgical benefit for survival. The aim of this study is to evaluate the clinicopathologic factors and the survival of patients with locally advanced gastric cancer and they had undergone combined pancreatico-splenectomy with a curative intent. Material and Methods: We retrospectively reviewed a total of 118 patients who had undergone total gastrectomy with distal pancreatico-splenectomy from 1990 to 2001. The patients were divided into 2 groups: 90 patients who were free from cancer invasion (group I), and 28 patients with histologically proven cancer invasion into the pancreas (group II). The various clinicopathologic factors that were presumed to influence survival and the survival rates were analyzed.
RESULTS
The rate of pathological pancreatic invasion was 23.7%. The tumor stage, depth of invasion, pancreas invasion, lymph node metastasis, lymph node ratio, curability and the hepatic and peritoneal metastasis were statistically significance on univariate analysis. Among these factors, the tumor stage, lymph node ratio and curability were found to be independent prognostic factor on multivariate analysis. The 5-years survival rates were 36.2% for group I and 13.9% for group II. The morbidity rate was 22.1%, and this included pancreatic fistula (5.1%), intra-abdominal abscess (4.2%) and bleeding (4.2%). The overall mortality rate was 6.8%.
CONCLUSION
Combined distal pancreatico-splenectomy with total gastrectomy with a curative intent was selectively indicated for those patients with visible tumor invasion to the pancreas, a difficult complete lymph node dissection around the distal pancreas and spleen, and no evidence of liver metastasis or peritoneal dissemination.

Keyword

Advanced gastric cancer; Pancreas invasion; Distal pancreatico-splenectomy

MeSH Terms

Abdominal Abscess
Gastrectomy*
Hemorrhage
Humans
Liver
Lymph Node Excision
Lymph Nodes
Mortality
Multivariate Analysis
Neoplasm Metastasis
Pancreas
Pancreatic Fistula
Retrospective Studies
Spleen
Stomach Neoplasms*
Survival Rate
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