Simple Summary Gastric cancer is the fourth largest cause of tumor-related death worldwide. Despite advances in the management of resectable cancer and improvements in early diagnosis, especially in east Asia where screening campaigns are actively performed, many patients experience recurrence and die because of the disease. Adjuvant systemic chemotherapy is administered after radical surgery in order to reduce the risk of recurrence and death. The modality of administration and regimens of chemotherapy in this setting are different between Eastern and Western countries. In Asia, adjuvant chemotherapy is traditionally given after surgery, while in Europe it is commonly scheduled after preoperative chemotherapy and surgery (perioperative chemotherapy), and in Northern America it is usually combined with radiotherapy (chemoradiotherapy). All these approaches are sustained by well-designed phase III clinical studies, and none may be considered superior to the others in the absence of head-to-head comparisons. The identification of predictive and/or prognostic factors could help to select patients at higher risk of recurrence and those more likely to receive a benefit from the adjuvant treatment. This would allow clinicians to avoid the administration of undue toxicity to non-responder patients and even to reduce the cost of unnecessary treatment. Advances in the management of gastric cancer have improved patient survival in the last decade. Nonetheless, the number of patients relapsing and dying after a diagnosis of localized gastric cancer is still too high, even in early stages (10% in stage I). Adjuvant systemic chemotherapy has been proven to significantly improve outcomes. In the present article we have critically reviewed the clinical trials that guide the current clinical practice in the adjuvant treatment of patients affected by resectable gastric cancer, focusing on the different approaches worldwide, i.e., adjuvant chemotherapy, adjuvant chemoradiotherapy, and perioperative chemotherapy. We also delineate the clinical-pathological characteristics that are commonly taken into account to identify patients at a higher risk of recurrence and requiring adjuvant chemotherapy, and also describe novel biomarkers and therapeutic agents that might allow personalization of the treatment.

Optimizing the Choice for Adjuvant Chemotherapy in Gastric Cancer

Cicero, Giuseppe;Alberti, Saverio
Membro del Collaboration Group
;
2022-01-01

Abstract

Simple Summary Gastric cancer is the fourth largest cause of tumor-related death worldwide. Despite advances in the management of resectable cancer and improvements in early diagnosis, especially in east Asia where screening campaigns are actively performed, many patients experience recurrence and die because of the disease. Adjuvant systemic chemotherapy is administered after radical surgery in order to reduce the risk of recurrence and death. The modality of administration and regimens of chemotherapy in this setting are different between Eastern and Western countries. In Asia, adjuvant chemotherapy is traditionally given after surgery, while in Europe it is commonly scheduled after preoperative chemotherapy and surgery (perioperative chemotherapy), and in Northern America it is usually combined with radiotherapy (chemoradiotherapy). All these approaches are sustained by well-designed phase III clinical studies, and none may be considered superior to the others in the absence of head-to-head comparisons. The identification of predictive and/or prognostic factors could help to select patients at higher risk of recurrence and those more likely to receive a benefit from the adjuvant treatment. This would allow clinicians to avoid the administration of undue toxicity to non-responder patients and even to reduce the cost of unnecessary treatment. Advances in the management of gastric cancer have improved patient survival in the last decade. Nonetheless, the number of patients relapsing and dying after a diagnosis of localized gastric cancer is still too high, even in early stages (10% in stage I). Adjuvant systemic chemotherapy has been proven to significantly improve outcomes. In the present article we have critically reviewed the clinical trials that guide the current clinical practice in the adjuvant treatment of patients affected by resectable gastric cancer, focusing on the different approaches worldwide, i.e., adjuvant chemotherapy, adjuvant chemoradiotherapy, and perioperative chemotherapy. We also delineate the clinical-pathological characteristics that are commonly taken into account to identify patients at a higher risk of recurrence and requiring adjuvant chemotherapy, and also describe novel biomarkers and therapeutic agents that might allow personalization of the treatment.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11570/3287811
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