Abstract

With a median survival of 9-11 months, advanced gastric cancer represents one of the most aggressive neoplastic disease in western Countries. Radical surgery is considered the cornerstone for any curative procedure, however only a relatively small proportion of resected cases can be considered cured after surgery. In the last few years research data suggested that advanced gastric cancer can be classified into 2 distinct clinical categories: locally advanced (nonmetastatic, non resectable) and metastatic. While the therapeutic goal in the metastatic setting is palliation and survival improvement, in locally advanced cases one of the main goals of the treatment should be response with the aim to make resectable what was unresectable. The introduction of docetaxel for the treatment of advanced gastric cancer represented then a crucial step forward for the cure of this disease with an improvement in both survival and response rate. In this article we reviewed past and ongoing trials using docetaxel in gastric cancer with the aim to delineate a possible effective strategy for the treatment of this tumour

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