November is Gastric Cancer Awareness Month. In 2020, gastric cancer was the sixth most common cancer in 2020, with 1.09 million new cases, according to the World Health Organization.
It was also the fifth most common cause of cancer death in 2020. Gastric cancer is common in certain parts of the world, including South America and Asia. Gastric cancer can affect any part of the stomach, but in most of the world, gastric cancers form in the main part of the stomach.
Mohamad Sonbol, MD, a medical oncologist at Mayo Clinic, shares five things to know about the current state of diagnosis, screening and treatment for gastric cancer:
- Endoscopy is usually the initial step in diagnosing gastric cancer, allowing physicians to diagnose, stage and treat some cancers at early stages. Using the endoscope, they can go in and remove localised and superficial abnormal growths. If physicians detect gastric cancer, they use a CT and positron emission tomography to scan for further staging.
- Screening for gastric cancer is not recommended in the general population, unlike in East Asia where it is more common. However, screening protocols are in place for people at higher risk. Risk factors include obesity, smoking, alcohol consumption and family history.
- Surgery is an option for patients whose cancer has not spread and is surgically removable. Surgery is the only curative approach for patients with localised or locally advanced gastric cancer. Other treatments, such as systemic therapy and radiation, maximise the chance of cure and lower the risk of the cancer returning.
- New therapeutic options are available for gastric cancer. In the US, the FDA approved the combination of chemotherapy with nivolumab, an immunotherapeutic drug, in metastatic gastric adenocarcinoma. FAM-trastuzumab deruxtecan-NXKI, administered as an infusion, is now an option for patients with HER2-positive metastatic gastric cancer.
Some immunotherapeutics are standard care and some are in studies. Chemotherapy kills cells all over the body, while immunotherapy stimulates the immune system to fight the cancer. Generally, chemotherapy works for a while and then stops. When immunotherapy works, it is usually for a longer time. Which regimen to choose depends on the different targets on the cancer cells.
“I tell patients who have been recently diagnosed with gastric cancer that there is hope,” Dr Sonbol said. “We now have many more treatment options than before.”
Source: EurekAlert!