Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jun 2022)

Laparoscopic versus Open Surgery for Gastric Cancer in Western Countries: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Short- and Long-Term Outcomes

  • Giovanni Maria Garbarino,
  • Giovanni Guglielmo Laracca,
  • Alessio Lucarini,
  • Gianmarco Piccolino,
  • Paolo Mercantini,
  • Alessandro Costa,
  • Giuseppe Tonini,
  • Giulia Canali,
  • Edoardo Maria Muttillo,
  • Gianluca Costa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11133590
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 13
p. 3590

Abstract

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Background. The advantages of a laparoscopic approach for the treatment of gastric cancer have already been demonstrated in Eastern Countries. This review and meta-analysis aims to merge all the western studies comparing laparoscopic (LG) versus open gastrectomies (OG) to provide pooled results and higher levels of evidence. Methods. A systematic literature search was performed in MEDLINE(PubMed), Embase, WebOfScience and Scopus for studies comparing laparoscopic versus open gastrectomy in western centers from 1980 to 2021. Results. After screening 355 articles, 34 articles with a total of 24,098 patients undergoing LG (5445) or OG (18,653) in western centers were included. Compared to open gastrectomy, laparoscopic gastrectomy has a significantly longer operation time (WMD = 47.46 min; 95% CI = 31.83–63.09; p p p p = 0.0060), shorter hospital stay (WMD = −2.335; 95% CI = −3.061 to −1.609; p p = 0.0056) and a better 3-year overall survival (logHR 0.245; 95% CI = 0.016–0.474; p = 0.0360). A slight significant difference in favor of laparoscopic gastrectomy was noted for the incidence of postoperative complications (logOR = −0.202; 95% CI = −0.403 to −0.000 the = 0.0499). No statistical difference was noted based on the number of harvested lymph nodes, the rate of major postoperative complication and 5-year overall survival. Conclusions. In Western centers, laparoscopic gastrectomy has better short-term and equivalent long-term outcomes compared with the open approach, but more high-quality studies on long-term outcomes are required.

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