Abstract

To investigate the risk factors of postsurgical gastroparesis syndrome (PGS) after subtotal gastrectomy in gastric cancer and the impact of PGS on prognosis. Clinical data of 422 patients who underwent subtotal gastrectomy for gastric cancer in the Central Hospital of Huzhou Sity from January 2004 to May 2010 were analyzed retrospectively. Risk factors of PGS were indentified and the recurrence-free survival was compared between the patients with and without PGS. PGS occurred in 42 patients (9.5%). Univariate analysis showed that: age over 65, combination of anxiety disorder, low-albuminemia in perioperative period, pyloric obstruction in preoperative period, high serume glucose level (≥ 11.2 mmol/L) in postoperative period, Billroth II (gastroenterostomy, operation time over 4 hours, using patient-controlled analgesia, or intravenous fluid over 3500 ml/d (all P<0.05) were prone to develop PGS. These might be potential clinical risk factors associated to PGS. Correlation analysis showed the number of clinical risk factors was positively correlated with the incidence of PGS (r=0.967, P<0.05). A total of 215 cases (50.9%) were followed up for 3-60 months. The mean recurrence-free survival time of patients with PGS was 26.1 months, which was shorter than that of those without PGS (33.4 months, P=0.029). Gastric cancer patients with the clinical risk factors mentioned above are prone to develop PGS after subtotal gastrectomy. PGS is associated with poor prognosis.

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