1990
DOI: 10.1007/bf01612909
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A critical evaluation of effectivity of extended lymphadenectomy in patients with carcinoma of the stomach

Abstract: The therapeutic benefit of extended lymphadenectomy in patients with gastric cancer is not generally accepted. We therefore analyzed the data of 82 patients with total gastrectomy and extended lymphadenectomy (compartment I: lymph nodes 1-6 and compartment II: lymph nodes 7-11) from 1979 to 1986 (GL group) for morbidity, mortality and survival and compared these with the results of a historical control group of 81 patients from 1971 to 1986 (group G), who similarly had undergone total gastrectomy but only comp… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…We conducted this study in order to assess the potential of a Japanese-type radical surgery in Western patients. Because experience and pancreas preservation are predominant factors for both the safety and completeness of an extended lymph node dissection (Siewert et al, 1998;Brennan, 1999;Roukos, 2000b), we started this study after gaining 7 years experience with D2 dissection (Roukos et al, 1990). This strategy and the low rate of pancreatectomies explains the low rate of in-hospital mortality (1.6%) in our study, which is similar to that of other reports (Marujama et al, 1987;Siewert et al, 1998;Fujii et al, 1999;Kim, 1999) suggesting the safety of the D2 procedure when the criteria of a surgeon's experience and pancreas-preserving technique are met.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We conducted this study in order to assess the potential of a Japanese-type radical surgery in Western patients. Because experience and pancreas preservation are predominant factors for both the safety and completeness of an extended lymph node dissection (Siewert et al, 1998;Brennan, 1999;Roukos, 2000b), we started this study after gaining 7 years experience with D2 dissection (Roukos et al, 1990). This strategy and the low rate of pancreatectomies explains the low rate of in-hospital mortality (1.6%) in our study, which is similar to that of other reports (Marujama et al, 1987;Siewert et al, 1998;Fujii et al, 1999;Kim, 1999) suggesting the safety of the D2 procedure when the criteria of a surgeon's experience and pancreas-preserving technique are met.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Changes in recruitment were due to skepticism about EL results reported in different published series. [10][11][12] We included resectable patients with any tumor stage (1997 tumor-node-metastasis classification 13 ), except for those with macroscopic distant metastases (bone, hepatic, lung, or peritoneal) and any location, excluding esophageal tumors, affecting the stomach. Patients with positive peritoneal lavage (two cases in D1 and four cases in D2), affected hepatoduodenal lymph nodes, or localized carcinomatosis at the bursa omentalis (one patient in the D2 group) were also included.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…14 Generally, local control with appropriate surgery alone or plus radiotherapy is important for clinical outcomes not only for breast cancer [12][13][14] but also for various cancer types including early-stage gastric tumors. 15,16 Improved survival rates can be achieved with adequate extensive surgery [17][18][19][20][21] or limited surgery plus chemoradiation. 22,23 A complete resection (R0) of the primary tumor still remains the standard treatment for localized solid tumors despite the availability of effective adjuvant chemoradiotherapy.…”
Section: Dear Sirmentioning
confidence: 99%