Abstract

Purpose: The benefit of adjuvant chemotherapy (CT) for localized gastric cancer (GC) after D2-gastrectomy has been clearly demonstrated. However, adjuvant chemoradiotherapy (CRT) remains controversial. This study aimed to assess the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of treatment for GC after D2-gastrectomy.Materials and methods: Stage IB–IIICGC patients who had received adjuvant CRT or CT, or who had just been observed after D2-gastrectomy were retrospectively selected. Therapeutic strategy after surgery, disease-free survival (DFS), overall survival (OS), adverse events and costs were recorded retrospectively. A Markov model was developed to simulate the process of GC after D2-gastrectomy. Health outcomes were measured using quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs). Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) was regarded as the primary outcome.Results: A total of 254 patients were selected. Three year OS and DFS were 83.02 and 64.15% in the adjuvant CRT group, 74.19 and 63.54% in the adjuvant CT group, and 45.45 and 43.35% in the observation group. Total grade 3 or 4 toxicity was higher in the CRT group than in the CT group (54.72% vs. 37.10%, p < 0.05). The ICER of the CT and CRT groups vs. the observation group were $10,571.55 and $11,467.41/QALY, respectively. The probability of CT, CRT and observation being cost-effective were 28.9, 37.9, and 33.2%, respectively, when a willingness-to-pay threshold (WTP) of $25,648.45/QALY was used.Conclusions: Adjuvant CRT was associated with improved OS and DFS compared with adjuvant CT and postoperative observation. Both adjuvant CRT and CT are likely to be cost effective compared with postoperative observation. However, adjuvant CRT was the optimal choice for a WTP threshold of $25,648.45/QALY.

Highlights

  • Gastric cancer (GC) is the fifth most common malignancy and the third leading cause of cancer death worldwide

  • We demonstrated increased survival and well-tolerated toxicity for adjuvant CT with or without concurrent radiotherapy in patients with stage IB to IIIC CG after D2-gastrectomy compared with postoperative observation

  • In comparison to the literature, the survival benefit at 3 years in the present study (OS 74%, disease-free survival (DFS) 66%) for the CT group was lower than that observed in the CLASSIC study (OS 85%, DFS 84%) and ACTS-GC trial (OS 80.1%, DFS 72.4%) [3, 4]

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Summary

Introduction

Gastric cancer (GC) is the fifth most common malignancy and the third leading cause of cancer death worldwide. GC remains among the leading causes of global cancer burden [1]. There were 679,100 new cases and 498,000 deaths in China, accounting for more than 60% of the total morbidity and mortality worldwide [2]. D2-gastrectomy has been widely considered as the best potentially curative treatment for patients with localized GC and is the standard procedure in Asia. Even when curative resection (R0) is possible, recurrence still ranges from 32 to 41.7% [3,4,5], indicating that the effectiveness of surgery alone remains poor and unsatisfactory

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