Τετάρτη 20 Ιουνίου 2018

Surgical management of metastatic gastrointestinal stromal tumour

Publication date: Available online 19 June 2018
Source:European Journal of Surgical Oncology
Author(s): Yvonne Schrage, Henk Hartgrink, Myles Smith, Marco Fiore, Piotr Rutkowski, Dimitri Tzanis, Christina Messiou, Vincent Servois, Sylvie Bonvalot, Jos van der Hage
BackgroundGastrointestinal stomal tumours (GISTs) are the most frequently diagnosed mesenchymal tumour of the gastrointestinal tract. The response of most GISTs to tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKIs) treatment is spectacular; however progression and/or secondary resistance inevitably occurs with long-term treatment of recurrent or metastatic disease. Randomised studies investigating the potential additive benefit of metastasectomy in addition to TKI treatment unfortunately failed to accrue sufficient patients. Therefore, the apparent benefit of surgery in the setting of metastatic disease is based on retrospective institutional series or extrapolation of data from studies which were not intended directly to investigate the impact of surgery. The aim of this review is to summarise the current literature to inform an approach to the surgical management of metastatic GIST.MethodsRelevant articles were retrieved from a comprehensive literature search using the PubMed database. Keywords included: GIST, metastasis, surgery, tyrosine kinase inhibitor. No restrictions on publication date were used.ResultsAn overview of relevant literature and suggestions for multidisciplinary decision making are formulated.ConclusionsOur narrative review has identified studies which suggest that surgery may be beneficial in selected patients with metastatic GIST with responsive or stable disease during TKI treatment. Similarly, surgery for isolated clonal proliferative progressive disease may improve progression free survival and delay switch to second-line TKI in some cases.



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