Abstract
AIMS: The aim of preoperative staging in gastric cancer is to correctly identify patients with advanced disease who should not be subjected to surgery and to allow the treatment of those who are admitted for operation to be planned accurately. This study assessed the impact of a policy of selective staging laparoscopy in patients deemed suitable for curative or palliative surgery, to ascertain whether the selective approach increased the frequency of abandoned or unplanned surgical procedures. METHODS: Fifty consecutive patients with gastric or type III gastro-oesophageal junction cancer staged by computed tomography (CT) alone, in whom surgery was felt to be appropriate for 'cure' or palliative symptom control, were studied. Specific CT, endoscopic and biochemical criteria were applied prospectively to select out a subgroup of 18 patients who also underwent preoperative staging laparoscopy. The overall accuracy of staging and operative outcomes were assessed. RESULTS: Using this selective approach the resection rate was 98 per cent, although three patients in each group had their planned procedure altered to a less radical (two in each group) or more radical (one in each group) resection (P = 0.23). Overall, 41 of 50 patients were staged correctly (accuracy 82 (95 per cent confidence interval 69-90) per cent) and 86 per cent of patients underwent the planned surgical procedure. The only abandoned operation occurred in the staging laparoscopy group. CONCLUSIONS: It is possible to plan a patient's operation accurately without the need for a staging laparoscopy in all cases.
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