Medical management of gastric cancer: A 2014 update

Elena Elimova, Hironori Shiozaki, Roopma Wadhwa, Kazuki Sudo, Qiongrong Chen, Jeannelyn S. Estrella, Mariela A. Blum, Brian Badgwell, Prajnan Das, Shumei Song, Jaffer A. Ajani

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

36 Scopus citations

Abstract

Gastric cancer represents a serious health problem on a global scale. It is the second leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide. Novel therapeutic targets are desperately needed because the meager improvement in the cure rate of about 10% realized by adjunctive treatments to surgery is unacceptable as > 50% patients with localized gastric cancer succumb to their disease. Either postoperative chemoradiotherapy (United States), pre-and post-operative chemotherapy (Europe), and adjuvant chemotherapy after a D2 resection (Asia) can all be regarded as standards of care in the localized gastric cancer management. In metastatic disease the addition of trastuzumab to chemotherapy is standard of care in Her2 positive disease. In the HER2 negative population, the treatments remain limited. In the first line setting, the standard of care is a combination of fluoropyrimidine and platinum containing chemotherapy, with or without epirubicin or docetaxel. The results of targeted therapy trials have by and large been disappointing, but none of these trials looked at an appropriately enriched population. Finally there is a meager overall survival benefit in treating patients with metastatic disease in the second line setting, with either irinotecan, docetaxel or ramucirumab however none of these drugs have been compared head to head in a well-powered randomized controlled trial.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)13637-13647
Number of pages11
JournalWorld journal of gastroenterology
Volume20
Issue number38
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 14 2014

Keywords

  • Chemoradiation
  • Chemotherapy
  • Gastric cancer
  • Localized
  • Metastatic

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Gastroenterology

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