Overview
- Editors:
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Paul H. Sugarbaker
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The Cancer Institute, Washington Hospital Center, USA
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Table of contents (21 chapters)
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Front Matter
Pages i-xxvii
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- Barry M. Shmookler, Melissa K. Buick
Pages 17-39
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- John D. Mellinger, Jeffrey L. Ponsky
Pages 51-68
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- Joan Vidal-Jove, Paul H. Sugarbaker
Pages 69-90
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- Ann G. Archer, David C. Grant
Pages 107-131
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- Minh Van Nguyen, Gary M. Clark, David Mascorro, Daniel D.Von Hoff
Pages 133-142
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- Roger F. Anderson Jr., Judy L. Chin, Kin-Sing Au, Juliana Simmons
Pages 247-264
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- Wansik Yu, Paul H. Sugarbaker
Pages 265-275
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- Jae-Gahb Park, Adi F. Gazdar, Yong-II Kim, Byung-Ihn Choi, In-Sung Song, Noe-Kyeong Kim et al.
Pages 285-305
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- Shigeru Fujimoto, Junji Kasanuki, Sho Yoshida, Katsuji Okui
Pages 307-324
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- Han J. Bonenkamp, Mitsuru Sasako, Gerardus H. M. Kampschöer, Cornelis J. H. van de Velde
Pages 339-356
About this book
Gastric cancer has been one of the great malignant scourges affecting man kind for as long as medical records have been kept. Until operative resection pioneered by Bilroth and others became available, no effective treatment was feasible and death from cancer was virtually inevitable. Even with resection by total gastrectomy, the chances of tumor eradication remained small. Over recent years, however, the situation has been changing. Some changes have resulted from better understanding of the disease, early detec tion, and better management techniques with applied clinical research, but the reasons for other changes are poorly understood. For example, the incidence of gastric cancer is decreasing, especially in westernized societies, where it has fallen from one of the most common cancers to no longer being in the top five causes of cancer death. Still it remains the number one killer of adult males in Japan and Korea. Whether the reduced incidence in western societies is a result of dietary changes or methods of food preservation, or some other reason, is as yet uncertain. Improvements in outcome have been reported from mass screening and early detection; more refined techniques of establishing early diagnosis, tumor type, and tumor extent; more radical surgical resection; and resection at earlier stages of disease.
Reviews
The book will be of great interest to all oncologists and gastrointestinal surgeons dealing with this disease, and should serve as the basis for many clinical trials. I enjoyed reading it very much.
Annals of Oncology
' For practising and academic oncologists engaged in the treatment of patients with advanced gastric carcinoma, it will serve as a source of useful information and ideas. ' Journal of the Nat. Cancer Inst. USA 84:20 1992
Editors and Affiliations
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The Cancer Institute, Washington Hospital Center, USA
Paul H. Sugarbaker