High BMI and high VFA can predict technical difficulties during laparoscopic gastric surgery and postoperative complications. Particularly, LADG should be performed cautiously to prevent surgical complications for male patients with high VFA. Predictive impact of VFA should be further determined in a larger set of patients.
Preoperative serum CEA is a reliable predictive factor of recurrence after curative surgery in CRC patients and a useful indicator of the optimal treatment after resection, particularly for cases classified as stage II or stage III.
This study aimed to identify predictive factors and to evaluate appropriate treatments for recurrence of esophageal cancer after curative esophagectomy. About 166 consecutive patients, who underwent curative esophagectomy, were enrolled between April 1994 and March 2003. Recurrence was classified as loco-regional or distant. Logistic regression analysis was used to identify predictive factors for recurrence. Prognostic factors were evaluated by Log-rank test and Cox proportional hazard regression analysis. The disease-specific 5-year survival was 56.8%. Recurrence was observed in 72 patients (43.4%), with 64 of these occurring within 3 years. The number of metastatic lymph nodes and lymphatic invasion independently predicted recurrence. There were significant differences in time to recurrence and survival time between loco-regional, distant recurrence, and combined recurrence. The 5-year survival time in patients with recurrence was 11.9%, and median survival time was 24 months. There was also a significant difference in survival after recurrence between treatment methods (no treatment vs chemo-radiotherapy, p=0.0063; chemotherapy, p=0.0247; and radiotherapy, p<0.0001). Meticulous, long-term follow-up is particularly necessary in patients with four or more metastatic lymph nodes to achieve early detection of recurrence. Randomized controlled trials should be used to develop effective modalities for each recurrence pattern to improve therapeutic outcomes.
An assessment of the learning curve of laparoscopy-assisted distal gastrectomy (LADG) might encourage its worldwide spread among inexperienced surgeons. One hundred sixty-seven patients with early gastric cancer were enrolled in this study: 67 underwent conventional open distal gastrectomy and 100 underwent LADG after classification into 5 groups of 20 according to the surgeon's level of experience. Patient characteristics and operative findings were compared between groups. Operation time was significantly longer, time to first flatus earlier, and blood loss reduced in the LADG groups compared with the open distal gastrectomy group. Surgeons with experience of 60 cases performed operations of similar times in both groups, and blood loss decreased with experience of 20 cases. There was no operative conversion, the frequency of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs administered were significantly less, and length of hospital stay were shorter by surgeons with experience of 60 cases. LADG is a technically feasible surgical procedure, depending on the surgeon's technical proficiency. Experience of at least 60 cases of LADG seems to result in satisfactory patient outcomes.
Our results suggested that aPKClambda/iota overexpression was a strong prognostic factor for gastric adenocarcinoma recurrence. As well as being a new prognostic indicator, aPKClambda/iota is also likely to be a novel therapeutic target for gastric cancer.
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