2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.jss.2012.03.035
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The prognostic value of detecting symptomatic or asymptomatic recurrence in patients with gastric cancer after a curative gastrectomy

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Cited by 21 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…Our results are consistent with those of previous studies, most of which analyzed a retrospective series and showed no survival benefit of early detection of recurrence, based on indirect evaluation of the effect of follow-up or no follow-up on survival by comparing survival between the presence or absence of symptoms at the time of recurrence [10,11,15,16]. In contrast, Tan and So [17] investigated the follow-up schedule itself for its effect on patient outcome by comparing long-term survival between patients who received intensive follow-up, which included computed tomography more than once every 12 months, and those who received regular follow-up.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…Our results are consistent with those of previous studies, most of which analyzed a retrospective series and showed no survival benefit of early detection of recurrence, based on indirect evaluation of the effect of follow-up or no follow-up on survival by comparing survival between the presence or absence of symptoms at the time of recurrence [10,11,15,16]. In contrast, Tan and So [17] investigated the follow-up schedule itself for its effect on patient outcome by comparing long-term survival between patients who received intensive follow-up, which included computed tomography more than once every 12 months, and those who received regular follow-up.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…It seems as if repeated follow-up examinations do not lead to discomfort but rather reassurance of the patients. Furthermore, the literature confirms that early asymptomatic diagnosis of recurrence is associated with improved prognosis [53,54].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 78%
“…Furthermore, asymptomatic patients had more benefit from re-resection and postrecurrence chemotherapy; at multivariate survival analysis the presence of symptoms was the only independent factor of poor survival, suggesting a more biologically aggressive disease in symptomatic patients. Bilici et al [51], in a study on 173 patients with recurrent gastric cancer, found that symptomatic recurrence is an important prognostic factor for postrecurrence survival and that the presence of symptoms may be considered a marker of biologic tumor aggressiveness, which is an important determinant of survival at the time of recurrence diagnosis during follow-up for gastric cancer.…”
Section: Evidence From Follow-up Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%