Observation
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World J Gastrointest Oncol. Jan 15, 2011; 3(1): 10-13
Published online Jan 15, 2011. doi: 10.4251/wjgo.v3.i1.10
Gastric cancer: Where is the place for the surgeon, the oncologist and the endoscopist today?
Markus Menges
Markus Menges, Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Gastroenterology, Diakonie-Hospital, 74523 Schwaebisch Hall, Germany
Author contributions: Menges M solely contributed to this paper.
Correspondence to: Dr. Markus Menges, MD, Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Gastroenterology, Diakonie-Hospital, Diakonie Str.10, D-74523 Schwaebisch Hall, Germany. markus.menges@diaksha.de
Telephone: +49-791-7534400 Fax: +49-791-7534904
Received: March 28, 2010
Revised: December 28, 2010
Accepted: January 4, 2011
Published online: January 15, 2011
Abstract

Gastric cancer remains a major health issue and a leading cause of death worldwide. While the incidence is decreasing in western countries, there has been a shift to more proximal cancers of the diffuse type, which are usually more aggressive and associated with a worse prognosis. Radical surgery still offers the only chance of long term survival, but surgery has reached a plateau of effectiveness and more aggressive approaches like “ultraradical” lymphadenectomy have not improved prognosis. There are three options to improve the situation: Earlier detection, neoadjuvant chemotherapy and adjuvant therapy. Whilst systematic gastroscopic screening makes sense in countries with a high incidence of gastric cancer, in other regions targeted investigation of risk groups including first-degree relatives of cancer patients, patients with a chronic corpus-dominant gastritis or with defined genetic abnormalities may help to detect cancer at an earlier stage. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy has meanwhile proved to significantly improve the prognosis not only in patients with a locally advanced cancer who cannot be resected for cure but but also in those who are potentially amenable to curative resection. In the largest randomised study so far reported, perioperative chemotherapy raised overall survival after 5 years from 23% to 36%. The role of adjuvant chemotherapy has been discussed for over 30 years. Meta-analyses demonstrate a small but significant effect which, however, seems to be restricted to Asian patients. In a large US-study, adjuvant radiochemotherapy appeared to significantly improve outcomes. However, less than 50% of the study patients underwent a systematic lymphadenectomy and so the results of the therapy group were not better to those of “only resected” patients in two large European studies. Thus, the indication of adjuvant (radio-)chemotherapy in gastric cancer currently remains uncertain. Endoscopists have found a therapeutic role through endoscopic resection of early cancers, introduced mainly by Japanese authors. With the development of high resolution endoscopy, endosonography and adequate equipment, the endoscopic curative resection of T1a-tumors (restricted to the mucosal layer) has been established.

Keywords: Gastric cancer, Surgeon, Oncologist, Endoscopist