Purpose: This study was designed to clarify whether preoperative tumor size is an independent prognostic factor (IPF) for patients with Borrmann type III gastric cancer.
Methods: The study group comprised 350 patients with Borrmann type III gastric cancer. We performed a log-rank plot analysis to establish the threshold value of preoperative tumor size for the prediction of overall survival (OS). Factors with P < 0.10 on univariate prognostic analyses for OS were put into a Cox's proportional hazards model to identify the IPFs.
Results: Peritoneal lavage cytology (CY) was the strongest IPF for patients with Borrmann type III gastric cancer (P < 0.0001). We were able to measure the tumor size preoperatively in 135 patients with negative CY results (CY0). The cutoff tumor size for the prediction of OS was 5.3 cm. A Cox's proportional hazards model showed that pathological lymph-node metastasis (P = 0.007) and preoperative tumor size (P = 0.018) were significant IPFs in the CY0 patients. Patients with a preoperative tumor size of <5.3 cm had satisfactory outcomes, with a 5-year OS rate of >80 %.
Conclusions: Preoperative tumor size is an IPF for patients with Borrmann type III gastric cancer and CY0. Thus, preoperative tumor size may be a useful factor for deciding on whether neoadjuvant chemotherapy is indicated.