Abstract

The aim of this prospective study was to compare subjective and objective quality of life (QoL) of gastric cancer patients after total gastrectomy with and without preservation of the duodenal passage during short- and long-term follow-up. The study included 68 patients, among them 37 (54%) persons subjected to total gastrectomy with Roux-Y reconstruction (R-Y group) and 31 (46%) individuals in whom gastrectomy was followed by formation of Henley-Longmire loop (H-L group). Subjective and objective QoL was determined 1 and 10 years postsurgery. During each visit, subjective QoL was determined with EORTC QLQ-C30 questionnaire, along with markers of nutritional status and self-reported incidence of symptoms specific to postgastrectomy syndrome. The two groups did not differ significantly in terms of their subjective QoL and markers of nutritional status at 1 and 10 years postsurgery, and none of these parameters underwent significant changes between the first and second evaluation. Patients from R-Y group reported subjective weight loss significantly more often during both visits, and individuals from H-L group significantly more often complained on postprandial diarrhea during long-term follow-up. Moreover, both groups showed an increase in the incidence of postprandial vomiting between the first and second evaluation. QoL of gastric cancer patients subjected to total gastrectomy stabilizes at relatively high level within a year from the surgery. Preservation of the duodenal passage does not exert a beneficial effect on both objective and subjective QoL after total gastrectomy.

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