Emerging Trends in the Management of Gastric Malignancy with Peritoneal Dissemination: Same Disease, Heterogeneous Prognosis
Evgenia Mela, Andreas Panagiotis Theodorou, Despina Kimpizi, Kyriaki Konstantinou, Nektarios Belimezakis, Dimitrios Schizas, Dimitrios Theodorou, Tania TriantafyllouGastric cancer is a significant global contributor to cancer-related mortality. Stage IV gastric cancer represents a significant percentage of patients in Western countries, with peritoneal dissemination being the most prevalent site. Peritoneal disease comprises two distinct entities, macroscopic (P1) and microscopic (P0CY1), which are associated with poor long-term survival rates. Although the present standard of treatment is palliative chemotherapy, a global controversy has arisen concerning specific patients with limited disease burden or conversion to negative lavage cytology following chemotherapy. Available approaches include systemic or intraperitoneal chemotherapy, upfront gastrectomy, and conversion surgery. This review consolidated the current evidence regarding multimodal management, indicating prolonged survival for this distinct subgroup of patients. Considering the complexity of peritoneal metastases, the potential of the multimodal approach unveils promising prospects for identifying the optimal treatment for this particular subset of stage IV patients and thus enhancing their survival outcomes.