M. Ghidini, L. Donis, L. Totaro, M. Ratti, C. Pizzo, I. Benzoni, D. Lomiento, F. Aldighieri, L. Toppo, V. Ranieri, C. Senti, G. Tanzi, M. Martinotti, R. Passalacqua, M. Rovatti, G. Tomasello
BackgroundIncidence of gastric cancer (GC) shows different distribution in Italy, with higher incidence in the north and center. We retrospectively analyzed the clinical data of patients resected at the Hospital of Cremona between January 2007 and December 2016. Available clinical variables were linked with survival to identify possible prognostic factors.Materials and methodsVariables analyzed were age, sex, type of surgery, site, histology, invasion, nodal status, resec-tion margins, grade, HER2 status, Helicobacter pylori infection (neo)adjuvant chemotherapy, adjuvant chemoradiotherapy, neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio, number of nodes removed and type of lymphadenectomy. Overall survival (OS) was esti-mated by the Kaplan–Meier method and differences between groups by the log-rank test. Data on OS were analyzed by Cox regression and the final model was obtained using the step-wise method.Results379 patients were considered, out of which 195 were operated from 2007 to 2011 and 184 from 2012 to 2016. Median follow-up was 25.5 months, median OS 31.3 months and time to recurrence 23.2 months. D2 resection rate increased from 36% (period 2007–2011) to 74% in 2012–2016 (p = 0.01) with a higher mean number of nodes collected (20.98 for 2007–2011 and 23.53 for 2012–2016, p = 0.040). Only 37% of patients received a postoperative treatment. At multivariate analysis, variables associated with OS were age (p = 0.002), stage (p < 0.001), resection margins status (p < 0.001), adjuvant chemotherapy (p < 0.010) and tumor location (cardia vs non-cardia) (p = 0.029).ConclusionsOur analysis shows that completeness of resection and lower stage are strong predictors of long-term survival in GC, providing the rationale for adjuvant and neoadjuvant approaches (chemotherapy, radiotherapy or combined). Cardial GC has worse prognosis compared to distal cancers
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