Publication: Previous Open Gastric Surgery Is Not a Contraindication for Laparoscopic Gastric Cancer Surgery
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Abstract
History of previous open abdominal surgery adversely affects the number of retrieved lymph nodes and increases the length of hospital stay after subsequent laparoscopic\rsurgery. The aim of this study was to investigate the clinical significance of the previous open gastric surgery (POGS) for laparoscopic gastric cancer surgery (LGCS).\rWe retrospectively examined the medical records of 150 gastric cancer patients who had adenocarcinoma and were operated laparoscopically. Patients were divided into\rtwo groups according to the history of POGS as POGS group (n=5) and none-POGS group (n=145). The laboratory parameters, clinical and operative data were assessed\rbetween the groups. The preoperative data were similar in both groups, except for tumor location. The length of hospital stay was longer, the number of excised and\rpositive lymph nodes were lower in the POGS group (p=0.023, p=0.016, and p=0.045, respectively). The operation time was longer in the POGS group, although this difference\rwas not significant [300 min (120-720 min) to 390 min (360-430 min), p=0.057]. POGS in patients with POGS can be performed safely with similar perioperative\routcomes compared to the patients with none-POGS. POGS may prolong the hospital stay. In addition, the number of excised lymph nodes may be lower. Nevertheless,\rPOGS should not be regarded as a contraindication for LGCS.
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WoS Q
Scopus Q
Source
Medicine Science
Volume
11
Issue
1
Start Page
31
End Page
35
