A European state of the art in the treatment of gastric cancer is presented from the results of a questionnaire. Data were obtained from 62 centers, 60% of which were from abroad and 40% of which were from Germany, reporting a total of 16,594 patients. A feature was a low portion (8.8%) of early cancer. The operation preferred was total gastrectomy. Only in the case of antral carcinoma of the intestinal type, according to Laurén, would the majority perform subtotal gastrectomy. Staging of lymph nodes was performed by 84% of these centers; however, systematic radical dissection was carried out only by 27%. The preferred type of reconstruction after total gastrectomy was Roux‐en‐Y esophagojejunostomy; 16% of the European centers used some type of pouch in addition. Splenectomy was carried out depending on location of the tumor.
The median in‐hospital mortality for early cancer was 0; for carcinoma of the antrum, 6.7%; corpus, 9.6%; and gastroesophageal junction, 11.7%. The median 5‐year survival rate in patients with early cancer was 82.5%; for advanced cancer of the antrum, 30.7%; corpus, 24%; and gastroesophageal junction, 15.5%. Ten‐year survival was 6–10% less.
It is concluded that in Europe there is a high rate of advanced gastric cancer affecting the results. Improved results may be expected if gastric cancer can be detected earlier and if there is radical lymph node dissection. Generally, prospective randomized studies presented by standardized documentation and statistics are urgently needed.
Neurogenic appendicopathy is a histopathological entity that can be identified by hematoxylin-eosin staining. History and clinical examination do not enable us preoperatively to differentiate between acute appendicitis, NA, and negative appendectomy.
LDP needed more time but potential advantages include increased spleen preservation and shorter hospital stay, as well as a trend for less transfusion, ventilation, and mortality. LDP for pancreatic cancer was performed rarely and will need critical evaluation in the future. Data from a prospective randomized registry trial is needed to confirm these results.
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