Abstract
The aim was to investigate the anatomical layers of the specific fascia involved in infrapyloric lymphadenectomy in laparoscopic radical gastrectomy for gastric cancer and to analyze the short-term efficacy of an anatomy-guided surgical approach. On the basis of many years of clinical practice in fascial anatomy-guided laparoscopic radical gastrectomy for gastric cancer, we proposed anatomical considerations for infrapyloric lymphadenectomy in this procedure and investigated the anatomy of the mesentery and mesenteric fusion in this region, including the specific starting and ending points and the plane of the operation. We also retrospectively analyzed the clinical data of 265 patients who underwent fascial anatomy-guided infrapyloric lymphadenectomy in laparoscopic radical gastrectomy for gastric cancer from January 2015 to January 2019 and compared the short-term efficacy between the fascial anatomy-guided laparoscopic infrapyloric lymphadenectomy plus mesogastric excision group and the laparoscopic infrapyloric lymphadenectomy group. Extensive mesenteric fusion and folds exist in the infrapyloric region of the stomach, and removal of the medial fold (medial leg) and lateral fold (lateral leg) of the infrapyloric mesogastrium during surgery is easily missed, resulting in incomplete removal of the infrapyloric mesogastrium. Baseline data were comparable between the laparoscopic infrapyloric lymphadenectomy plus mesogastric excision group and the laparoscopic infrapyloric lymphadenectomy group. The mean operative time for infrapyloric lymphadenectomy, the number of positive lymph nodes harvested in the infrapyloric region, and the number of patients with mesenteric metastasis in the infrapyloric region were not significantly different (P>0.05). The number of harvested lymph nodes was higher in the laparoscopic infrapyloric lymphadenectomy plus mesogastric excision group than in the laparoscopic infrapyloric lymphadenectomy group (5.09±3.30 vs. 4.13±2.90, P<0.05), and intraoperative blood loss was lower in the former group than in the latter group (5.89±3.78 vs. 25.21±11.24 mL, P=0.000). Fascial anatomy-guided laparoscopic infrapyloric lymphadenectomy enables systematic and complete removal of the lymph nodes and mesentery of the infrapyloric region with less intraoperative blood loss.
Published Version
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