Abstract

Sixty-six consecutive patients with primary gastric non-Hodgkin's lymphoma are reported. All patients underwent surgery which consisted of radical resection in 23 patients (36%) and partial or palliative excision in the remaining 43 cases (36 and 7 respectively). Three patients died before starting chemotherapy, two refused the treatment and 61 completed the postoperative chemotherapeutic programme. We analysed this group of patients in order to assess the efficacy of chemotherapy following surgery. Chemotherapy included either CVP or the original protocols from our institution. Excluding patients who underwent radical resection, postoperative chemotherapy induced complete remission in 87% of the remaining 39 patients. After a median follow-up of 84 months (range 6-216), the 10-year cause-specific survival was 90% with a stable curve plateau after about 25 months. The survival was only influenced by response to therapy (p < 0.0001). The disease-free survival for patients who were not radically resected was 93%. We encountered only two relapses after 15 and 32 months. One of these was local and the other systemic. Our results indicate that chemotherapy following surgery induces long-term remission and survival in primary gastric lymphoma and in particular improves remission and survival, in stage II. In our opinion, surgery may also be fundamental for the treatment of gastric lymphoma in the majority of cases.

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