Korean J Clin Oncol.  2019 Dec;15(2):112-120. 10.14216/kjco.19020.

Surgical outcomes and prognostic factors of gastric cancer surgery in octogenarians

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Surgery, Inje University Haeundae Paik Hospital, Inje University College of Medicine, Busan, Korea. oltx62@hanmail.net

Abstract

PURPOSE
As the Korean population ages, an increasing number of elderly patients with gastric cancer are undergoing surgical resection. The aim of this study was to analyze the surgical outcomes and prognostic factors after gastric cancer surgery for patients 80 years of age or older.
METHODS
We analyzed the medical records of 720 patients with gastric cancer who underwent gastrectomy from March 2010 to December 2014 retrospectively. Patients were divided into two groups: octogenarians (age ≥80 years, n=46) and non-octogenarians (age <80 years, n=674). We evaluated clinicopathologic data including postoperative morbidity, mortality, and 5-year survival rate.
RESULTS
The rate of curative resection was not different between the two groups. The American Society of Anesthesiology score was significantly higher in the octogenarians (P<0.05). Octogenarians exhibited poorer performance scale scores, higher comorbidities, and more advanced TNM stages than non-octogenarians. There was no difference in surgical resection margins between the two groups. In addition, octogenarians suffered from more postoperative morbidity and mortality than non-octogenarians. In the analysis of risk factors of survival after gastrectomy for octogenarians, advanced TNM stage and dose of transfusion were independent risk factors. Overall survival was significantly lower in octogenarians than non-octogenarians. There was no difference in the disease-specific survival for each stage of cancer after adjustment for tumor stage.
CONCLUSION
Octogenarians had more preoperative risk factors and postoperative morbidity and mortality, but cancer-specific survival was comparable with non-octogenarians. Careful preoperative evaluation, thorough resection, and attentive postoperative care can improve the overall survival of octogenarians with gastric cancer.

Keyword

Gastric cancer; Octogenarian; Treatment outcome; Prognostic factor

MeSH Terms

Aged
Aged, 80 and over*
Anesthesiology
Comorbidity
Gastrectomy
Humans
Medical Records
Mortality
Postoperative Care
Retrospective Studies
Risk Factors
Stomach Neoplasms*
Survival Rate
Treatment Outcome
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