Presented by Miguel A Burch at the KSELS Joint Panel: Gastric Cancer – Narrowing the Gap between Eastern and Western Practice in Laparoscopic Gastric Surgery held during the 2017 SAGES Annual Meeting in Houston, TX on Thursday, March 23, 2017
Keyword(s): 5-year survival, adhesions, adjuvant therapy, advanced cancers, advanced disease, Annals of Surgery, ASA, blood loss, China, Class II studies, colon cancer, colonoscopy, colorectal, comorbidities, complications, CT scan, D2 dissection, dehiscence, DFS, disease free survival, distal disease, Eastern, Eastern Asia, EBL, endoscopic ultrasound, estimated blood loss, EUS, gastric cancer, hepatobiliary, incidence, intraop blood loss, intraoperative blood loss, Italy, KLASS, Korea, Korean Laparoendoscopic Gastrointestinal Surgery Study, KSELS, landmark study, laparoscopic gastric surgery, laparoscopic LND, laparoscopic lymph node dissection, laparoscopic surgery, learning curve, length of stay, lesser sac, Level I evidence, long-term follow-up, LOS, lymph node harvest, males, margins, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, meta-analysis, MIG, minimally invasive gastrectomy, morbidity, mortality, multicenter prospective comparative study, multivariate analysis, neoadjuvant CRT, oncologic, oncologic outcomes, open, open gastrectomy, open surgery, operative time, postoperative morbidity, preoperative staging, proximal disease, pulmonary, randomized controlled trials, RCT, recovery, recurrence, robotic surgery, screening, short term outcome, single center trials, total gastrectomy, tumor staging, United States, university hospitals, volume, Western Practice, WHO, wound complications
Global burden of cx–34 sec
High quality RCTs–1:50
Short-term outcomes–4:32
Evolution of evidence–5:28 Ann Surg 2016
Long-term outcomes–8:48
Minimally invasive gastrectomy in early, distal cx–9:27
Outcomes in advanced disease–10:25 Ann Surg 2005
Citation–11:44 Ann Surg Oncol 2015
Poor adoption of MIG in the West–15:36
Citations–16:54 Ann Surg 2016
Conclusion–18:32