Total gastrectomy. A 15-year experience with particular reference to the patient over 70 years of age
R. Bittner, H. Schirrow, M. Butters, R. Roscher, W. Krautzberger, W. Oettinger and H. G. Beger
Between 1969 and 1984, a total of 186 patients underwent total gastrectomy.
Seventy-four patients were more than 70 years of age. Surgical mortality
was 13.4%, with only minor differences between those patients younger than
70 years and older patients--12.5% and 14.8%, respectively. Moreover, there
was no major difference if surgery was curative or merely palliative. Of 27
patients with tumors at TNM stage IV, only one died. Of the 100 patients
who were operated on during the five-year period between 1979 and 1984,
only four died, for an operative mortality of 4%. These results suggest
that this remarkable decline of mortality is due to a precise
standardization of surgical technique and improvements in preoperative
patient management and aftercare. The five-year survival was 15.9%; again,
there was no major difference between the group of patients older than 70
years and those younger than 70 years (19.4% and 14.5%, respectively). The
ten-year survival was 4.9%.