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Clinicopathological Factors Affecting Stomach Preservation Following Laparoscopic Sentinel Node Navigation Surgery in Patients with Early Gastric Cancer: A Secondary Analysis of the Multicenter Randomized Phase III SENORITA Trial

Authors
Jeong, Sang-HoMin, Jae-SeokKim, Young-WooYoon, Hong ManAn, Ji YeongEom, Bang WoolHur, HoonLee, Young JoonCho, Gyu SeokPark, Young-KyuJung, Mi RanPark, Ji-HoHyung, Woo JinKook, Myeong-CherlHan, MiraNam, Byung-HoRyu, Keun Won
Issue Date
Jun-2025
Publisher
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Ltd.
Keywords
Early gastric cancer; Failure; Laparoscopy; Sentinel basin node; Sentinel node navigation surgery
Citation
Annals of Surgical Oncology, v.32, no.6, pp 4280 - 4291
Pages
12
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Annals of Surgical Oncology
Volume
32
Number
6
Start Page
4280
End Page
4291
URI
https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/77767
DOI
10.1245/s10434-025-17114-1
ISSN
1068-9265
1534-4681
Abstract
Background: The SENORITA phase III trial demonstrated the effectiveness of laparoscopic sentinel node navigation surgery (LSNNS) in preserving stomach function for patients with early gastric cancer (EGC), although some patients experienced surgical failure or recurrence. The purpose of this study was to analyze patients’ clinicopathologic features from the SENORITA trial who were allocated to LSNNS with stomach-preserving surgery but ultimately did not preserve stomach or experienced recurrence. Patients and Methods: Patients were categorized into two groups: the failure group (stomach preservation failure or cancer recurrence after LSNNS) and the success group (stomach preservation without recurrence following LSNNS). This study analyzed the detailed clinicopathologic characteristics of patients in the failure group from the SENORITA trial. Results: Among 258 patients who underwent LSNNS, 193 patients (74.8%) achieved stomach preservation, while 65 patients (25.2%) failed to preserve. Intraoperative failure was the most common cause of unsuccessful stomach preservation, occurring in 35 of 65 cases (53.8%). Advanced pathological TNM stage was the only independent risk factor by multivariate analysis, with stage IB and IIA patients showing 5.9- and 45.0-fold higher failure risks. The main causes of failure included sentinel basin detection failure, metastatic lymph nodes, positive tumors at resection margins, and complications. The failure group also included five cases of gastric cancer recurrence following LSNNS. Conclusion: Accurate preoperative staging and patient selection are crucial for optimizing LSNNS outcomes. Ensuring precise resection with an adequate number of harvested sentinel basin nodes is essential to succeed the stomach-preserving surgery. © Society of Surgical Oncology 2025.
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