The Value of Palliative Gastrectomy in Treatment of Patients with Advanced Gastric Cancer

Document Type : Original Article

Authors

1 Department of General Surgery, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt

2 Department of Clinical Oncology, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt

Abstract

Background & objectives: Gastric cancer accounts for over 10% of cancer-related deaths worldwide and remains the second most frequent cause of cancer death. While surgical resection is considered to be the most suitable treatment for early gastric cancer, it remains debatable for those patients with advanced disease, and adjuvant therapy is still considered the main line of management of these patients. Some studies reported that palliative gastrectomy may be beneficial for survival and improving the quality of life. In spite of that, many studies reported that survival after palliative gastrectomy was associated with significant morbidity and poor quality of life. Our study aims to evaluate the value of palliative gastrectomy with systemic chemotherapy in comparison with systemic chemotherapy alone in management of cases of advanced gastric cancer.
 
Patients and methods: Between June 2013 and March 2017, patients with advanced gastric cancer (T4 N1-3 M0, T1-4 N3 M0, and any T or N with M1) were prospectively included in this study. Enrolled patients were assigned either to have palliative gastrectomy followed by systemic chemotherapy, or to have systemic chemotherapy alone. The patients were followed up regularly after treatment. Postoperative parameters, disease-specific mortality, mean survival & Kaplan-Meier survival analysis were used to assess the outcomes.
 
Results:Twenty-nine patients completed the study. Sixteen patients in the surgery group & 13 in the systemic chemotherapy group were included. Partial gastrectomy was done in 7 cases and total gastrectomy was done in 9 cases. Six patients (37.5%) had postoperative complications & one case (6.3%) of postoperative mortality was recorded. The mean survival of patients of the surgery group was (11.2±1.8 months), which was significantly longer than that of the patients who received systemic chemotherapy alone (7.1±1.3 months). Kaplan-Meier survival analysis showed that the overall survival probability estimate in the surgery group was 32.6% at 1 year and 12.5% at 2 years, compared to 16.1% at 1 year and 0% at 2 years in the chemotherapy group, with difference being statistically significant.
 
Conclusion: Palliative gastrectomy may be done in patients with advanced gastric cancer with acceptable morbidity and mortality rates. It may provide a survival benefit in selected cases of advanced gastric cancer when combined with systemic chemotherapy.

Keywords


 

The Value of Palliative Gastrectomy in Treatment of Patients with

Advanced Gastric Cancer

 

Haitham Mostafa Elmaleh,1   MRCS, MD; Mahmoud Saad Farahat,1 MD; Sherif Ahmad

Abdelwahab,2 MD

1Department of General Surgery, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt

2Department of Clinical Oncology, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt

 

 

 

 

Background & objectives: Gastric cancer accounts for over 10% of cancer-related deaths worldwide and remains the second most frequent cause of cancer death. While surgical resection is considered to be the most suitable treatment for early gastric cancer, it remains debatable for those patients with advanced disease, and adjuvant therapy is still considered the main line of management of these patients. Some studies reported that palliative gastrectomy may be beneficial for survival and improving the quality of life. In spite of that, many studies reported that survival after palliative gastrectomy was associated with significant morbidity and poor quality of life. Our study aims to evaluate the value of palliative gastrectomy with systemic chemotherapy in comparison with systemic chemotherapy alone in management of cases of advanced gastric cancer.

 

Patients and methods: Between June 2013 and March 2017, patients with advanced gastric cancer (T4 N1-3 M0, T1-4 N3 M0, and any T or N with M1) were prospectively included in this study. Enrolled patients were assigned either to have palliative gastrectomy followed by systemic chemotherapy, or to have systemic chemotherapy alone. The patients were followed up regularly after treatment. Postoperative parameters, disease-specific mortality, mean survival & Kaplan-Meier survival analysis were used to assess the outcomes.

 

Results:Twenty-nine patients completed the study. Sixteen patients in the surgery group & 13 in the systemic chemotherapy group were included. Partial gastrectomy was done in 7 cases and total gastrectomy was done in 9 cases. Six patients (37.5%) had postoperative complications & one case (6.3%) of postoperative mortality was recorded. The mean survival of patients of the surgery group was (11.2±1.8 months), which was significantly longer than that of the patients who received systemic chemotherapy alone (7.1±1.3 months). Kaplan-Meier survival analysis showed that the overall survival probability estimate in the surgery group was 32.6% at 1 year and 12.5% at 2 years, compared to 16.1% at 1 year and 0% at 2 years in the chemotherapy group, with difference being statistically significant.

 

Conclusion: Palliative gastrectomy may be done in patients with advanced gastric cancer with acceptable morbidity and mortality rates. It may provide a survival benefit in selected cases of advanced gastric cancer when combined with systemic chemotherapy.

 

Key words: Advanced gastric cancer, palliative gastrectomy, total gastrectomy, systemic chemotherapy, morbidity and mortality.

 

 

 

 

Introduction

Although the rates of gastric cancer are decreasing all over the world, it still accounts for over 10% of cancer-related deaths worldwide and remains the second most frequent cause of cancer death after lung cancer.1,2  The long-term outcomes for early diagnosed gastric cancer are mush improved with new treatment modalities involving radical gastrectomy with lymph node dissection combined with chemotherapy, but for advanced cases results are generally still poor.3,4

 

While surgical resection is considered to be the most suitable treatment for early gastric cancer, it  remains  debatable  for  those  patients  with advanced disease, and adjuvant therapy is still considered the main line of management of these patients. The National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guidelines suggest that gastric resections should be reserved for the palliation of symptoms (e.g. obstruction or uncontrollable bleeding)  in  patients  with  incurable  disease.5

The Japanese Gastric Cancer Association (JGCA) guidelines suggest that patients with metastases but without major symptoms may be treated with gastrectomy.6 

In  theory,  palliative  gastrectomy  could  enable oral food intake, and treat symptoms such as obstruction and bleeding.7,8 Some studies reported that palliative gastrectomy may also be beneficial for survival, and improving the quality of life.8-12

 

In spite of that, palliative gastrectomy is usually technically difficult with locally advanced tumours. In addition, poor patients’ preoperative general condition may adversely affect surgical outcomes, resulting in a higher postoperative complication and  mortality  rates.13-15    Many  studies  reported that survival after palliative gastrectomy was associated with significant morbidity, longer hospital stay and poor quality of life,16,17  and thus gastrectomy  was  recommended  only  for  cases with serious complications, such as tumor bleeding or perforation.18,19

 

As this debate continues, our study aims to evaluate the value of palliative gastrectomy with adjuvant therapy in comparison with adjuvant therapy alone, in management of cases of advanced gastric cancer.

 

Patients and methods

Study design:

The study was conducted in the General Surgery and the Clinical Oncology Departments at Ain Shams University hospitals, Cairo, Egypt, between June 2013 and March 2017, as a prospective comparative study that included patients with advanced gastric cancer. Advanced gastric cancer was defined as T4

N1-3 M0, T1-4 N3 M0, and any T or N with an M1

7th

edition.20

The    exclusion    criteria    were:

(1)

Patients

who     received     neo-adjuvant

 

 

tumour category according to the TNM classification chemotherapy or radiotherapy and (2) Patients with  concomitant  severe  medical  illness  that might not tolerate general anesthesia. All included patients were required to sign an informed consent. The included patients were assigned to either gastrectomy group (Group A) or systemic chemotherapy group (Group B). Patients were assigned to surgery group based on the following indications: 1) Patients with complications related to tumour (as bleeding, obstruction or perforation) and 2) Patients without complications but had chosen to undergo surgery to reduce tumour burden. Patients were assigned to systemic chemotherapy group if they did not have any emergency complications or if they refused to undergo surgery.

 

Patients’ preparation:

All patients underwent upper gastrointestinal endoscopy and biopsy with histo-pathological examination of specimens, a gastrografin meal study, computed tomography scans of the abdomen and pelvis, complete laboratory investigations (including complete blood picture, liver and kidney function tests, fasting and post-prandial blood sugar, and tumor markers) and chest X-rays in addition to  any other  necessary  investigations. All tumors were diagnosed as adenocarcinomas by histo-pathological assessment of biopsy specimens.

 

Surgical procedures:

The patients included in the study underwent either total (for tumors of the body or fundus) or partial (for distal stomach tumors) gastrectomy with lymph node dissection. A small stomach remnant was left in cases of partial gastrectomy and a Billroth II reconstruction was done. In cases of total   gastrectomy,   reconstruction   was   done as a Roux-en-Y end-to-side oesophagojejunal anastomosis. Patients with none resectable tumours  had  other  palliative  procedures  and were excluded from the study. Figures 4-6 show preoperative, operative & postoperative pictures of patient in the surgery group.

 

Postoperatively the naso-jejunal tube was removed as soon as fluid drainage became less than 100 ml/24 hr. Approximately 200 to 300 ml of clear fluids per 24 hours were given on the following days. Between the sixth and eighth postoperative days, a gastrographin study was performed to detect  any  anastomotic  leakage.  The  patients were then given an increasing oral diet. After the operation, patients were followed up for presence of postoperative complications, operation related mortality (within 30 days) and operation related readmissions. Patients who survived the first month without any morbidity were sent to the oncology department for adjuvant therapy according to the same protocol used in group B.

 

Systemic chemotherapy:

A combination of Epirubicin 50mg/m2 IV, Cisplatin 60  mg/m2    IV  and  oral  Capecitabine  625  mg/ m2   twice daily was given for 21 days and the whole regimen was repeated every 21 days and reassessment was done after 3 cycles. Responders continued for a total of 6 cycles, while non- responders discontinued treatment. The same regimen was used for patients undergoing surgery, 1 month after operation.

 

Follow-up:

Patients of both groups attended regular follow-up visits for at least 12 months (monthly for 6 months and every 3 months for the next 6 months and twice a year thereafter). The routine examination during follow-up included physical examination, blood chemistry tests, chest X-ray, and abdominal ultrasound. Pelvi-abdominal CT, bone scan and endoscopy were done for selected patients when indicated, with documentation of any operation or tumour related morbidity and mortality.

 

 

 

 

Table 1: Characteristics of the study population

 

Variable                                                        Surgery Group (A)


 

 

Systemic Chemotherapy

Group (B)

 

Number                                                                    16                                               13

Age                                                                    54.9 ± 16.1                                  56.2 ± 12.7

Gender

Male                                                                     10                                                7

Female                                                                  6                                                 6

Tumour site

Fundus / Body                                                         9                                                 8

Distal stomach                                                        7                                                 5

Tumour size

< 5 cm                                                                  4                                                 4

5-10 cm                                                                10                                                6

> 10cm                                                                  2                                                 3

Histological type

Ill differentiated                                                      6                                                 4

Ill differentiated                                                     10                                                9

Pre-intervention TNM

stage

T-stage

T1                                                                0                                                 0

T2                                                                2                                                 1

T3                                                               10                                                9

T4                                                                4                                                 3

N-stage

N0                                                                0                                                 0

N1                                                                6                                                 7

N2                                                                7                                                 4

N3                                                                3                                                 2

M-stage

M0                                                               4                                                 3

M1                                                              12                                               10

Depth of invasion

T2 (MO, SS)                                                            3

T3 (Serosa)                                                           13

 

 

T4 (Adjacent organ)                                                 0

P0

9

P1

4

P2

3

P3

0

Site of metastasis

Peritoneal

7

N/A

Liver

4

5

Lung

2

3

Ovary

1

1

Other

0

1

 

 

Peritoneal dissemination


N/A

 

 

 

N/A

 

 

 

Statistical analysis:

The disease was staged according to the Tumour, Node, Metastasis (TNM) classification. The following variables were evaluated: age, gender, tumor site, tumour size, histological type (differentiated or undifferentiated), lymph node metastasis, depth of invasion (T2 [muscularis propria (MP), subserosa (SS)], T3 [serosa penetrated], or T4 [adjacent organs]), peritoneal dissemination (P0, CY1 [positive lavage cytology] and P1 [few metastases near the stomach], P2 [few distant metastases], or P3 [many distant metastases]); distant metastasis (absence or presence) and its site and operative method (partial or total). Data were analyzed using the SPSS statistical software program version 21 for Windows (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA). The survival rate and the parameters from the collected data were compared between the two groups, Chi-square test, independent t-test and Kaplan- Meier survival analysis were used. A P-value less than 0.05 was considered significant.

 

Results

Thirty-two patients were enrolled in our study, 13 in the systemic chemotherapy group and 19 in the surgery group, 3 patients in the surgery group were excluded from the study (2 were found to have none resectable tumours and 1 was lost during follow-up), so the final number of included patients was 29. 

Seventeen of the patients were males (58.6%) and 12 were females (41.4%), the mean age of patients was 55.6 ± 14.8 (range: 34-68) years.

 

Table 1 Shows the pre-intervention characteristics of the patients and their disease.

 

These characteristics were compared between both surgery and systemic chemotherapy groups using chi-square test and independent t-test, and no significant difference was found between both groups.

 

Surgery was performed due to emergency indications in 7 cases and for elective indication in 9 cases. The indication of surgery was bleeding tumour in 4 cases (25%), obstruction and vomiting in 3 cases (19%) and for reducing tumour burden in the remaining 9 cases (56%).

 

Partial gastrectomy was performed in 7 cases (43.75%) and total gastrectomy was done in 9 cases (56.25%). No organ other than the stomach was subjected to a combined resection in our study, except one case (6.25%) with tumour invading the spleen and tail of pancreas, which necessitated performing splenectomy and distal pancreatectomy in addition to the gastrectomy. No intraoperative mortality or major intraoperative complications were recorded in our study. Operative data and indications for operation are shown Table 2, Figure 1.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Table 2: Operative data in the surgery group

 

Mean ± SD

Minimum

Maximum

Partial gastrectomy

168.3±14.3

91

214

Total gastrectomy

202.1±27.1

127

261

Partial gastrectomy

305.9±76.9

100

500

Total gastrectomy

436±105.2

150

850

 

 

Item

 

Operative time

 

 

Intraoperative blood loss 

 

Operative time was less in partial gastrectomy group compared to total gastrectomy patients (168.3±14.3min  versus  202.1±27.1  min)  and blood loss was more in total gastrectomy compared to  partial  gastrectomy  (436±105.2  ml  versus 305.9±76.9 ml).

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fig 1: Indications for operation in the surgery group. 

The mean hospital stay period was 8±4.9 days (range: 6-22), during the early post-operative hospital stay 6 patients (37.5%) had postoperative complications (2 cases (12.5%) of anastomotic leakage, 2 cases (12.5%) of subphrenic abscess and 2 cases (12.5%) of pneumonia). 

One patient had to be re-explored due to haemorhage after operation, but bleeding was controlled and the patient recovered well after that. One case (6.3%) of operation related mortality was recorded in the first month after surgery (due to generalized sepsis after anastomotic leakage) (Figure 2).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fig 2: Postoperative morbidity & mortality in the study.

 

 

 

Patients of both groups (surgery group patients 1month after the operation) had systemic chemotherapy according to same protocol and were followed up by the same schedule.

 

The  mean  follow-up  period  in  our  study  was 13.3±2.1  months  (range  5-23  months).  The mean survival in patients of the surgery group was (11.2±1.8 months). This was found to be significantly longer than that of the patients who received systemic chemotherapy alone (7.1±1.3 months). Kaplan-Meier survival analysis showed that the overall survival probability estimate in the surgery group to be 32.6% at 1 year and 12.5% at 2 years, compared to 16.1% at 1 year and 0% at 2 years in the systemic chemotherapy group. There was a statistically significant difference in survival between patients treated with palliative gastrectomy followed by systemic chemotherapy and those treated with systemic chemotherapy alone (Figure 3).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fig 3: Kaplan-Meier survival probability curve & mean survival graph in the study.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fig 4: Preoperative picture showing a large tumor visible by inspection at the left upper quadrant of the abdomen.

 

 

 

 

Fig 5: An intraoperative view of the tumor invading the spleen and tail of pancreas.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fig 6: Postoperative picture of the resected specimen including the stomach, spleen, tail of pancreas & omentum.

Discussion

In countries where the incidence of gastric cancer is not high and screening for it is uncommon, the disease is often advanced at the time of diagnosis, and hence patients’ survival is poor. Based on published data, the average survival for patients with stage IV gastric cancer is 16 weeks, with only 25% living 34 weeks or longer.21

 

Palliative gastrectomy was proposed as an option for management of patients with advanced gastric cancer. The rationale behind palliative gastrectomy in patients with advanced gastric cancer is that the primary tumor will result in complications (obstruction, perforation or bleeding), so resection will be a treatment for those complications. Also, resection will be associated with removal of gross disease to improve function and quality of life by removing a bulky symptomatic tumour. Moreover, if a significant proportion of the tumour load is removed, the disease may be more responsive to systemic chemotherapy.22  It is also thought that volume and tumour burden reduction diminishes the metabolic demands made on the patient by the tumour. In addition, because the tumour itself can produce immunosuppressive cytokine, reducing the tumour burden may also have an immunologic benefit.23

 

Radical surgical resection is the primary treatment for early gastric cancer, but for patients with advanced or metastatic disease the benefit of surgical resection is unclear. The role of palliative gastrectomy in patients with advanced gastric cancer  is  a  matter  of  controversy.  Although some  studies  stated  the  presence  of  benefits for palliative gastrectomy for advanced gastric cancer,7,11,24  others argued that it is associated with higher incidences of postoperative morbidity and mortality, prolonged hospital stay and poor quality of life.16,17,25

Our study aimed to evaluate the value of palliative gastrectomy with systemic chemotherapy in management of advanced gastric cancer patients, at our university hospitals.

 

In our study, 19 patients were operated on for advanced gastric cancer, 2 of them were found irresectable and were excluded from the study (in addition to another patient who was lost from follow-up). No organ was subjected to a combined resection in our study, except one case with tumour invading the spleen and tail of pancreas, which necessitated performing splenectomy and distal pancreatectomy in addition to the gastrectomy. We tried not to do multi-organ resection in our study to decrease the operative morbidity as possible. It is known that the number of sites of tumour spread and the tumour load influences the resectability rate and should be taken into account when a palliative gastrectomy is considered. Some authors had identified that resectability rate is inversely proportional to the number of sites of tumour spread (100% resectability rate with one site, 11% with 4 sites).10  This delineates the importance of accurate preoperative staging in planning a proper management choice for every patient.

 

In our study, the operative data (operative time and intraoperative blood loss), as well as postoperative data (hospital stay period) and postoperative complication (37.5%) and mortality (6.3%) rates were higher than those recorded in other studies. A recently published randomized trial by Fujitani and his colleagues, about palliative gastrectomy with chemotherapy versus chemotherapy alone reported a median duration of surgery of 180 minutes  (140-210  min),  with  a  median  blood loss of 200 mL (100-398 mL) among patients assigned  to  gastrectomy  plus  chemotherapy. They  had  postoperative  complications  in  16% of the 87 patients who underwent gastrectomy. No patient in their study underwent reoperation. Operation related death, occurred in one patient (1%) in their study.26  Their results are generally better than ours and this is predictable as their study took place in large referral centers in Japan and Korea with better experience and expertise in dealing with gastric cancer patients. Our operative and postoperative data also suggest the technical difficulty of palliative gastrectomy. Previous authors had shown high postoperative complication rates following non-curative gastrectomy, which were reported as 10-38%. They attributed that to technical  difficulty  in  non-curative  gastrectomy and poor preoperative nutritional status.11,14,27-30 Minimizing postoperative complications is not only important for reducing morbidity and mortality, but also to improve the survival outcome of patients undergoing palliative gastrectomy, as systemic chemotherapy must be given as early as possible, and presence of postoperative complications will delay the systemic chemotherapy.

 

Our study had shown a significant survival benefit for palliative gastrectomy followed by systemic chemotherapy in comparison to chemotherapy alone (mean survival of 11.2±1.8 months versus 7.1±1.3 months and Kaplan-Meier survival probability estimate of 32.6% at 1 year and 12.5% at 2 years, compared to 16.1% at 1 year and 0% at 2 years).

 

A  lot  of  research  work  was  done  to  identify the  survival  benefit  of  palliative  gastrectomy for advanced gastric cancer. Kunisaki and his colleagues found that for patients undergoing palliative gastrectomy, the 1, 3 and 5-year disease- specific survival rates were 37.7%, 16.7%, and 5.0%, respectively, with a median survival time of 9 months. They reported that larger tumor diameter, increased depth of invasion, undifferentiated histological type, less extensive lymph-node dissection, and absence of chemotherapy were all  adversely  affecting  the  survival.27    In  their study, Samarasam et al., also found that there was a significant survival advantage of palliative gastrectomy   versus   non-resectional   operation (24 months versus 12 months).10  Chang and his colleagues reported that palliative gastrectomy carried a significant survival benefit in patients receiving chemotherapy who had metastasis to one organ compared with none resection (14 versus 9.7 months).31 In their study, Saidi et al., reported that the overall survival of patients who were treated with surgery plus adjuvant treatment was far better than for those who were not (the mean survival among patients who underwent palliative gastrectomy was 14.4 months in comparison to 5.9 months for those treated without gastrectomy.24

 

A recent meta-analysis of “clinical significance of palliative gastrectomy on the survival of patients with incurable advanced gastric cancer” including 14 different studies was published by Sun and his colleagues. The results showed the trend that palliative gastrectomy may improve survival in patients with incurable advanced gastric cancer. They found that the weighted average of median survival time in patients with palliative gastrectomy was longer than that without palliative resection (14.96 months compared to 7.07 months). They stated that palliative gastrectomy improved the long-term survival in patients with advanced gastric  cancer.  They  found  that  the  impact on  the  improvement  of  survival  may  depend on  the  position  of  metastasis,  chemotherapy and combined resection of metastasis. Their analysis also suggested that combined palliative gastrectomy with hepatectomy may be beneficial for patients with liver metastasis.32

All of these data are from retrospective studies and therefore it is difficult to have strong conclusions from them. 

Recently,   a   randomized  controlled   trial   had taken place in Japan and Korea to determine the value of gastrectomy performed in patients with advanced gastric cancer. They recently published their results and it was somewhat different from the previously mentioned data. Their study took place between 2008 and 2013, and included 175 patients randomly assigned to chemotherapy alone or gastrectomy plus chemotherapy. In this study, gastrectomy plus chemotherapy did not provide a survival advantage compared with chemotherapy alone in the treatment of advanced gastric cancer with a single non-curable factor (overall survival at 2 years was 31.7% for patients assigned to chemotherapy alone compared with 25.1% for those assigned to gastrectomy plus chemotherapy). The median overall survival was 16.6 months for patients assigned to chemotherapy alone and 14.3 months for those assigned to gastrectomy plus chemotherapy. In their analysis of the results, they found that gastrectomy plus chemotherapy was associated with significantly worse overall survival in patients with upper-third tumours, because, the median number of chemotherapy cycles was reduced after gastrectomy to half of that for chemotherapy alone. This may be the reason that the result of surgery was found inferior to chemotherapy alone in their study.26

 

Taking our results and these literature data into account, it is evident that palliative gastrectomy may have a survival benefit in patients with advanced gastric cancer, but in certain patients not all of them. Identifying these patients who may benefit from palliative gastrectomy is very important and needs more research work. In clinical practice, the benefits of gastrectomy must be balanced with its risks and costs before the decision of treatment is taken.

 

In addition, as seen from published data, chemotherapy is important in the management of advanced gastric cancer. Published data showed that patients undergoing palliative gastrectomy combined with chemotherapy might have a survival advantage compared to patients undergoing palliative gastrectomy alone. Authors recommend that palliative gastrectomy should be combined with chemotherapy to improve the survival rates of patients.32-34

 

Our study has some limitations. First, the sample size is not large enough restricting the statistical power to support conclusions. Second, patients were not randomized, but rather selected for each treatment  group.  Third, the  patient  population was heterogeneous, some having only locally advanced disease and other metastatic disease, and the sample size did not allow for analyzing the effect of treatment on every category separately.

 

Conclusion

Palliative gastrectomy may be done in patients with advanced gastric cancer with acceptable perioperative morbidity and mortality rates. It may provide a survival benefit in selected cases of advanced gastric cancer when combined with systemic chemotherapy. More research is needed to accurately identify patient population who may benefit from such an operation as a treatment of choice.

 

 

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