Study aim: The aim of this prospective study was to evaluate, in a series of 350 gastric adenocarcinomas, the evolution of their clinical and histological features and the evolution of their surgical management.
Patients and methods: From 1970 to 1996, 350 patients with gastric carcinoma (cardiac cancer excluded) were operated on in the same center. Mean age was 68.8 years and the sex ratio 1:4. These patients were divided into three groups which were analysed and compared (group 1 operated on between 1970 and 1988, group 2 between 1979 and 1987, group 3 between 1988 and 1996).
Results: Antropyloric cancer was the most common (56% in group 3). Tumor size decreased but there were in group 3 more undifferentiated tumors (54.2%) and more tumors with lymph node involvement (72%). Stage III and IV tumors were still common (70% in group 3) and early gastric cancer incidence very low (9.9%). After 1980, surgical management was more radical, with more total gastrectomies and larger lymph node dissections. Adjuvant intraoperative and postoperative radiotherapy has been associated since 1985. Postoperative mortality rate decreased (13.8% in group 1 vs 6.1% in group 3) (P = 0.04) as did the postoperative morbidity rate (31.8% in group 1 vs 17.5% in group 3). The five-year actuarial survival rate was respectively 18.9% and 39.2% for groups 1 and 2 (P = 0.003); it was respectively 59.8% and 43.6% for all patients treated by adjuvant radiotherapy and for those with lymph node involvement.
Conclusion: Prognosis of gastric adenocarcinoma is still poor. A more radical surgical treatment did not increase the postoperative morbidity rate, but increased the survival rate. New adjuvant treatments including radiotherapy have to be evaluated in order to improve the prognosis.