Gastric cancer in a general hospital. Santa Rosa Hospital. Experience

2009 
PURPOSE: Determine the frequency of gastric cancer and its clinical and pathological characteristics, clinical stages, surgical treatment, morbimortality and survival in a general hospital. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Retrospective, descriptive study on 71 consecutive patients diagnosed with gastric cancer at the Santa Rosa Hospital from January 1, 2005 to January 31, 2008. RESULTS: During the study period, 71 cases of gastric adenocarcinoma were confirmed by histopathology. This disease is more frequent in men, with a 1.54 to 1 ratio, as compared to women. The most frequent age of appearance is between the fifth and seventh decades of life. Distal tumors (81.7%) are four times more common than proximal tumors (18,3%). The most common histological type was carcinoma in signet-ring cells (40.8%). The most frequent degree of differentiation was Undifferentiated (42.3%). A 62% (n=44) of patients entered the operating room. The resectability rate was 68% (n=30). The advanced stage was the most common form of presentation in patients (97.2%), while the early stage was rare (2.8%). The most frequent surgeries were the distal subtotal gastrectomy (73.3%) and the total gastrectomy (26.7%). The D2 (73.3%) dissection was performed. The mortality rate was 6.7% and the morbidity rate was 26.7%. Survival was better in patients who underwent resection than in patients who only underwent biopsy or were unresectable, evidencing statistical significance. CONCLUSION: Gastric cancer is diagnosed in a late stage and surgical treatment plays a pivotal role and, even in advanced cases, morbidity/mortality is acceptable for the initial experience at a third-level general hospital. It is necessary to carry out screening program to detect the disease in earlier stages.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    4
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []