Abstract

Baseline tumor size is one of important prognostic factors for imatinib therapy in patients with advanced gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST). The purpose of this study was to determine whether surgical cytoreduction before imatinib therapy can improve the prognosis. A total of 249 patients with advanced GIST were reviewed retrospectively. Patients were categorized into two groups according to the degree of initial cytoreduction: 35 patients with ≥75 % of initial tumor bulk removed (cytoreduction group) and the other 214 patients (no cytoreduction group). The median follow-up was 44.0 months. Patients in the cytoreduction group were younger, in better performance, showed more initially metastatic disease, peritoneal metastases, but fewer liver metastases. The baseline tumor size when starting imatinib became significantly reduced in the cytoreduction group, which made significant difference between the two groups. By multivariate analyses, mutational status, tumor size, and granulocyte count at presentation were associated with progression-free survival. Age and tumor size were associated with overall survival. However, initial cytoreduction was not significantly related to the prognosis. Cytoreduction before imatinib therapy appears not to improve the prognosis. Imatinib therapy should still represent the initial treatment for advanced GIST.

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