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Clinical outcome of using gastric remnant or jejunum or colon conduit in surgery for esophageal carcinoma with previous gastrectomy
Author(s) -
Jun Wang,
Wei Wen,
Weibing Wu,
Jing Xu,
Fuxi Zhen,
Xiaoxiang Xi,
Bihong Lu,
Tong Zhou,
Liang Chen,
Jinhua Luo
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of surgical oncology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.201
H-Index - 111
eISSN - 1096-9098
pISSN - 0022-4790
DOI - 10.1002/jso.24564
Subject(s) - medicine , jejunum , esophagectomy , gastrectomy , anastomosis , gastroenterology , esophagus , stomach , carcinoma , esophageal cancer , surgery , cancer
Background For esophageal carcinoma patients with early gastrectomy, individualized surgical plans—including selection of replacement conduit and operation route based on patient's new lesion and surgical history—can achieve the desired therapeutic effect and improve postoperative life quality. We investigated the outcomes at our institution. Methods The clinical data of 42 esophageal carcinoma patients with early gastrectomy were analyzed retrospectively. Results Esophagectomy was performed combining replacement with remnant stomach in 16 patients, jejunum in 17, and colon in 9. Esophagectomy combining replacement with gastric remnant got advantages of shorter operation time and less bleeding over that of replacement with jejunum or colon. Gastric remnant group scored higher on the QLQ‐C30 questionnaire than jejunum or colon group with respect to overall quality of life, physical function, and social relationships. In QLQ‐OES18 questionnaire, the scores of appetite recovery and reflux mitigation were more favorable in remnant stomach group than those in jejunum or colon group. Survival analysis showed no significant difference in survival rate among the patients undergoing replacement with gastric remnant, jejunum, or colon. Conclusions For esophageal carcinoma patients with early gastrectomy, esophagus‐gastric remnant anastomosis possesses advantages of shorter operation time, less surgical trauma, and greater life quality after surgery.