Postgastrectomy follow-up in the West: evidence base, guidelines, and daily practice

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Abstract

Follow-up after gastrectomy for gastric cancer has several purposes, including management of side effects of surgery, oncological recurrence surveillance, psychological support, and data collection for research. How follow-up after gastrectomy, and especially recurrence surveillance, is performed differs immensely between different Western countries, despite guidelines from Western oncological organizations quite unanimously advocating symptom-driven surveillance, without scheduled cross-sectional imaging, endoscopies, or analysis of tumor markers. Given a complete lack of randomized data, the available body of observational data does not support intensive routine surveillance for recurrent disease. Moreover, studies of other cancers have shown a negative emotional impact of routine surveillance. There is an apparent need for randomized controlled trials to address the issue of optimized strategies for postgastrectomy recurrence surveillance.

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Nilsson, M. (2017). Postgastrectomy follow-up in the West: evidence base, guidelines, and daily practice. Gastric Cancer, 20, 135–140. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10120-016-0654-9

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