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Page 4 of 16                              Sugarbaker. J Cancer Metastasis Treat 2018;4:7  I  http://dx.doi.org/10.20517/2394-4722.2017.67


               Table 1. Reports of patients with gastric peritoneal metastases treated by cytoreductive surgery and hyperthermic
               intraperitoneal chemotherapy
                                        No. of   Anticancer agent during  Median survival   1-year   3-year   5-year
                References       Year  patients       HIPEC         (months)  survival (%) survival (%) survival (%)
                Fujimoto et al. [20]  1997  48   MMC                  16         54        41       31
                Hirose et al. [38]  1999  17     MMC-cisplatin-etoposide  11     44        --       --
                Rossi et al. [39]  2003  13      MMC-cisplatin        15         --        --       --
                Glehen et al. [40]  2004  49     MMC                  10.3       48        --       16
                CC-0 or CC-1             25                           21.3       74.8      --       29.4
                Hall et al. [34]  CC-0  2004  34  MMC                 --         --        --       --
                                                                      11.2       45
                Yonemura et al. [32]  CC-0  2005  107  MMC-cisplatin-etoposide  11.5  --   --       6.5
                                         47                           15.5       --        --       27
                Scaringi et al. [41]  CC-0  2008  32  MMC-cisplatin   6.6        --        --       --
                                         8                            15
                Glehen et al. [33]  CC-0*  2010  159  Various         9.2        43        18       13
                                         85                           15         61        30       23
               From Sugarbaker et al.  [43]  with permission. CC-0: complete macroscopic cytoreduction; CC-1: residual tumor nodules < 5 mm; MMC:
               mitomycin C; HIPEC: hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy


               Although there may be a survival benefit, perioperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy can increase
               morbidities. Even the most experienced peritonectomy centers that remove all macroscopic disease and
                                                                                               [30]
               then administer intraperitoneal chemotherapy have a higher morbidity and cost [32-34] . Yan et al.  discussed
               an association of improved overall survival with HIPEC with or without EPIC after resection of advanced
               gastric primary cancer, however, with EPIC there was an associated greater risk for intraabdominal abscess (P
                                                      [35]
               = 0.003) and neutropenia (P = 0.007). Yu et al.  also saw an increased risk of intra-abdominal abscess with
               the use of EPIC compared to the control arm. Intraperitoneal chemotherapy does have less systemic toxicity
               as compared to systemic chemotherapy. Although individual studies did not show a significant difference
               in neutropenia between treatment arms, the meta-analysis demonstrated a significantly higher risk of
                                                            [30]
               neutropenia in the intraperitoneal chemotherapy arm .
               Most of the randomized studies were completed in Asia and it is unknown if they can be compared
               with disease in Western areas. Perioperative chemotherapy may be of greater benefit in Western patients
               with more advanced disease and less lymph nodes dissected. Data does suggest a role of HIPEC with or
               without EPIC to improve overall survival for advanced primary gastric cancer with advanced T-stage and
               no peritoneal metastases. A prospective multi-institutional randomized controlled trial with well-defined
               eligibility criteria, interventions and end-points is currently in progress in France (D2 resection ± HIPEC) in
               locally advanced gastric carcinoma, GASTRICHIP, ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01882933.



               TREATMENT PROTOCOLS FOR GASTRIC CANCER WITH PERITONEAL METASTASES
               Gastric cancer with peritoneal metastases has been considered a terminal condition. Prospective studies had
                                                  [36]
               a median survival of less than 6 months . Although response rates to systemic chemotherapy regimens
               have improved, there has not been a similar reflection in survival rates . There may be some effective
                                                                             [37]
               palliation of gastric cancer resections in patients with peritoneal metastases, however there is no long-term
               improvement in survival.


               CYTOREDUCTIVE SURGERY AND HIPEC AS AN EFFECTIVE STRATEGY
               There is potential for long-term survival for patients with gastric cancer and peritoneal metastases with
               the combined use of CRS and HIPEC. There are single institutional data and phase II studies that support
                                                            [33]
               use of this strategy [Table 1] [31-34,38-41] . Glehen et al.  studied 159 patients with a median follow-up of
               20.4 months. There was a median overall survival of 9.2 months but the 5-year survival rate was 13%.
               Although CRS and HIPEC in gastric cancer with peritoneal metastases is less effective than with other
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