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Stages I – III are curable, with metastatic gastric cancer usually being incurable. Cancers located only in the mucosa or submucosa (“early” gastric cancer) may be treated endoscopically or with minimally invasive surgery. | Stages I – III are curable, with metastatic gastric cancer usually being incurable. Cancers located only in the mucosa or submucosa (“early” gastric cancer) may be treated endoscopically or with minimally invasive surgery. | ||
The standard curative surgical treatment for “advanced” gastric cancer patients is radical gastric resection with lymphadenectomy. For intestinal type gastric cancer, distal or subtotal gastric resection is performed. For diffuse type gastric cancer, total gastrectomy is necessary. Afterwards, the <abbr>GI</abbr> system must be reconstructed by Roux-en-Y, Billroth I, or Billroth II | The standard curative surgical treatment for “advanced” gastric cancer patients is radical [[gastric resection]] with lymphadenectomy. For intestinal type gastric cancer, distal or subtotal gastric resection is performed. For diffuse type gastric cancer, total gastrectomy is necessary. Afterwards, the <abbr>GI</abbr> system must be reconstructed by Roux-en-Y, Billroth I, or Billroth II. | ||
Surgery may be used [[Palliative surgery|palliatively]] as well, in cases where the tumour obstructs passage of foodstuffs, for example. A stent may be placed, the stomach may be resected, or bypass surgery may be employed. | |||
Surgery may be used [[Palliative | |||
Chemotherapy may be used [[Neoadjuvant therapy|neoadjuvant]] for downstaging (to allow for surgery with curative intent), as [[adjuvant therapy]], and as palliative therapy. | Chemotherapy may be used [[Neoadjuvant therapy|neoadjuvant]] for downstaging (to allow for surgery with curative intent), as [[adjuvant therapy]], and as palliative therapy. |