Abstract

(1) Background: Peritoneal metastasis in gastric cancer is associated with a poor prognosis. Complete cytoreductive surgery including gastrectomy and complete removal of all peritoneal lesions followed by hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) achieves promising results. There exists an immersive variety of approaches for HIPEC that makes it difficult to weigh different results obtained in the literature. In order to enable standardization and development of HIPEC, we here present a systematic review of different drug regimens and technical approaches. (2) Methods: PubMed, Embase, and the Cochrane Library were systematically searched on 26 May 2021 using the mesh terms “intraperitoneal chemotherapy AND gastric cancer”. Under consideration of systematic review guidelines, articles reporting on HIPEC in combination with CRS were selected. Data on duration, drugs, dosage, and other application parameters as well as morbidity and long term survival data were extracted for subsequent statistical analysis, tabulation, and descriptive synthesis. We assessed the risk of bias due to inhomogeneity of the patient cohort and incompleteness of report of HIPEC parameters. (3) Results: Out of 1421 screened publications, 42 publications presenting data from 1325 patients met the criteria. Most of the publications were single institutional retrospective cohort studies. The most common HIPEC regimen is performed after gastrointestinal anastomosis and consists of 50–200 mg/m2 cisplatinum and 30–40 mg/m2 mytomycin C at 42–43 °C for 60–90 min in a closed abdomen HIPEC system with three tubes. Almost every study reported incompletely on HIPEC parameters. Lower rates of anastomotic leakage were reported in studies that performed HIPEC after gastrointestinal anastomosis. Studies that performed open HIPEC and integrated a two-drug regimen indicated better overall survival rates. (4) Discussion: This is an exhaustive overview of the use of drug regimens and techniques for HIPEC after CRS for gastric cancer peritoneal metastasis. Other indications and application modes of intraperitoneal chemotherapy such as prophylactic or palliative HIPEC apart from CRS were not addressed. (5) Conclusion: Complete report of HIPEC parameters should be included in every publication. A consensus for dose expression either per BSA or as flat dose is desirable for comparison of the drug regimens. Despite numerous variations, we identified the most common regimens and techniques and their advantages and disadvantages according to the data in the literature. More phase I/II studies are needed to identify the best approach for HIPEC. (6) Other: This review was not supported by third parties.

Highlights

  • Despite recent efforts in prevention and early detection, gastric cancer (GC) still remains one of the most common and lethal neoplastic diseases worldwide, accounting for more than one million new cases in 2020 and 7.7% of all cancer-related deaths [1].The peritoneum represents the second most common site of gastric cancer metastasis and is the most common site of cancer recurrence [2,3]

  • In an effort to contribute to this standardization of hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) regimens, we present a systematic review of all existing randomized controlled studies (RCTs) and prospective and retrospective trials with respect to technical approaches and drugs used for HIPEC in the context of CRS for Peritoneal metastasis of gastric cancer (pmGC)

  • 42 publications published between 1988 and 2021 were included in this review, including 2 RCTs, 5 phase I/II clinical trials, two prospective cohort studies, and 33 retrospective studies reporting on 1325 patients treated with CRS and HIPEC for pmGC

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The peritoneum represents the second most common site of gastric cancer metastasis and is the most common site of cancer recurrence [2,3]. Peritoneal metastasis of gastric cancer (pmGC) has very poor median survival rates of only 3–6 months [4–6]. Palliative systemic intravenous chemotherapy still represents the standard treatment strategy for pmGC. Hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) combines the concept of direct delivery of the chemotherapeutic agent to the peritoneum, enabling the application of higher local doses with low systemic toxicity and the enhancement of its cytotoxic effects using hyperthermia [7–9]. HIPEC even offers the possibility of cure for a highly selected cohort of patients in cases of complete surgical resection of all peritoneal metastases and simultaneous oncologic gastrectomy with tumor-free resection margins and

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call