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GIST -CURRENT TRENDS Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital Madras Medical College Chennai

Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

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Page 1: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

GIST -CURRENT TRENDS

Prof SM ChandramohanProfessor and HOD

Department of Surgical GastroenterologyCenter of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery

Rajiv Gandhi Government General HospitalMadras Medical College

Chennai

Page 3: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Epidemiology

• Most common mesenchymal neoplasm of the GI tract.

• 0.1%-3% of all GI malignant tumors

• Median age of 60 years (40-80)

No predilection for either gender (Miettinen M, Eur J Cancer 2002,

Rossi CR, Int J Cancer 2003; )

Page 4: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Unique

Biologic behavior,

Clinicopathological features,

Molecular mechanisms

Treatment implications.

Page 5: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Clinical Spectrum

Benign

Intermediate

Malignant

Page 6: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

History

1960

•Smooth muscle neoplasm of GIT

1980

•Immunohistochemistry

•Smooth muscle & neuronal differentiation and null

1983

•MAZUR &CLARK

•Coined the term GIST

1998

•c-KIT proto-oncogene

Page 7: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

<Location

Page 8: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

• Multicentric GISTs - <5%

• “Extra” GISTsSites Other than GIT,

- genito urinary,portal vein, pancreas

“Micro” GISTs - Size <2 cm “Giant” GISTs - ? 5 cm ? 10 cm

Page 9: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

CELL OF ORIGIN

Interstitial” cells of CAJAL

Santiago ramon y cajal -1893 • Interposed between smooth

muscle and nerve endings.

• Pacemaker—propagates intrinsic peristalsis

Page 10: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

CELL OF ORIGIN –Nobel laureate

Page 11: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Biomarkers in GIST

C KIT

Page 12: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

KIT is a 145-kDa glycoprotein

CD117

-epitope on the extra-cellular domain of the KIT receptor.

Steel factor (SLF)

stem-cell factor ligand for KIT.

Binding of SLF to KIT

-activation of KIT tyrosine kinase activity

-downstream signaling pathways

-uncontrolled cell proliferation

Page 13: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

KIT Mutations

20 mutations

Exon 11

Most common

Better response to imatinib

Exon 9

Common in small bowel

Poor response to imatinib.

Page 14: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Wild-type GIST (WT-GIST)

GISTs that have no detectable KIT or PDGFRA mutations- (10%-15%)

DOG gene

Discovered On GIST-1 gene in CH 11q13

DOG1 is a calcium dependent, receptor activated chloride channel protein expressed in GIST-independent of mutation type

Page 15: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Immunohistochemistry

Gastrointestinal Mesenchymal Tumor

C-kit (+) or CD 34 (+)

GIST (80%)

C-kit (-) or CD 34 (-)

SMA (+) or Desmin (+)

Leiomyoma (15%)

S-100 (+)

Neurinoma (5%)

Page 16: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

GIST

CD 117 - >95%

CD 34 – 60-70%

Vimentin

Actin - 15-30%

Lymphoma

B-cell- CD 20,CD 79

T-Cell- CD 3,CD 5

Page 17: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

D/D

Page 18: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Pathology

Few millimeters to more than 30 cm,

(median size -5 and 8 cm.)

Muscularis propria layer of GI wall

Exophytic growth.

Mucosal ulceration-50% cases.

Mass attached to the stomach, projecting into the abdominal cavity and displacing other organs.

Page 19: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Pathological types

Exophytic Endophytic Combined

Page 20: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Smooth

Gray and white tumors

Well circumscribed

Pseudocapsule

Small areas of hemorrhage

Cystic degeneration

Necrosis

Page 21: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

HistoPathology

• Nuclear palisading or prominent perinuclear vacuolization patternSpindle cell

• Solid pattern or a myxoid pattern, with a possible compartmental patternEpitheloid

• Both spindle cell and epitheloid patternMixed

pattern

Page 22: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Histology

Spindle pattern

Epitheliod pattern

Page 23: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

CLINICAL PRESENTATION…

Asymptomatic, Especially early in

tumor development, Discovered

incidentally by CT or endoscopy

Page 24: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Symptomatic GISTs

Vague abdominal discomfort (60%-70%).

Bleeding (30%-40%).

Perforation (20%)

Anorexia, weight loss, nausea, anemia, and additional GI complaints

Page 25: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Site specfic symptoms

Esophageal GISTs -dysphagia, Gastric and small intestinal GISTs

- Bleeding &Intestinal obstruction.

Duodenal GISTs

- Biliary Obstruction Colorectal GISTs –

-pain and GI obstruction, and lower intestinal bleeding.

Page 26: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Acute Presentation

Bleeding

peritoneal cavity- Ruptured Gist

GI tract lumen-

hematemesis, melena or anemia

Obstruction

Over growth

Intussusception

Volvulus

Page 27: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Syndromes linked to GISTs

(i) Carney triad

Gastric GISTs,

Paraganglioma,

Pulmonary chondromas.

(ii) Type-1 neurofibromatosis

Generally wild-type

Predominantly located at the small bowel

Possibly multicentric .

(iii) Carney-Stratakis syndrome

Germ-line mutations of succinate dehydrogenase Dyad of GIST and paraganglioma

Page 28: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

UGI Scopy

Page 29: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

EUS- Management process

Page 30: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Contrast enhanced computed tomography (CECT)

Modality of choice.

To characterize the lesion&evaluate its extent.

To assess the presence or absence of metastasis at the initial staging workup.

Monitoring response to therapy

Performing follow-up surveillance of recurrence

Page 31: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Provides better soft-tissue contrast resolution and direct multiplanar imaging

Helps to localise the tumour

Delineate the relationships of the tumour and adjacent organs.

Particularly of benefit in anorectal disease.

Page 32: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

MRI

Axial T2-weighted MR image

Extraluminal mass arising from the greater curvature of the stomach.

The mass shows high signal intensity

Page 33: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Benign gastric fundal GIST- MRI

Axial T1-weighted Axial enhanced T1-weightedAxial T2-weighted

Homogeneous iso-intensity

Homogeneous medium lintensity

Homogeneous moderate enhancement

Page 34: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

CT or MRI

large exophytic tumor with heterogeneous contrast enhancement, arising from the stomach or small bowel.

Metastases, if present, are usually to the liver or peritoneum.

Lymph node enlargement is uncommon.

Page 35: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

CT&MRI-D/D

Lymphomas

Circumferential with homogeneous enhancement

Lymph node enlargement.

Carcinoid tumors

Found in the distal ileum,or root of the mesentery,

Desmoplastic reaction with calcifications.

Large carcinomas

More likely to cause visceral obstruction.

Page 36: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

FDG-PET

Reveals small metastases

Establish baseline metabolic activity

Assess therapy response

Helps to clarify ambiguous findings seen on CT or MRI

To assess complex metastatic disease in patients who are being considered for surgery

Page 37: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Changes in the metabolic activity of tumors precede anatomic changes on CECT.

used to assess the response to Imatinib therapy.

Routine use of PET for surveillance after resection is not yet recommended

Page 38: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

FNAC/BIOPSY

FNA- controversial

-risk of rupture and dissemination

Resectable lesion in the absence of metastatic disease

“Preoperative diagnosis may be unnecessary”

Page 39: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Biopsy-Indications

If diagnosis would impact the extent of resection

Prior to Neoadjuant therapy

Unresectable GISTs

Metastatic GISTs

Page 40: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General
Page 41: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Fletcher 2002

Size Mitotic count

Very Low risk <2 cm <5/50 HPF

Low risk 2-5 cm <5/50 HPF

Intermediate risk <5 cm5-10 cm

6-10/50 HPF<5/50 HPF

High risk >5 cm>10 cmAny size

>5/50 HPF Any count>10/50 HPF

Page 42: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General
Page 43: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

UICC 2010 TNM 7th Edition

Page 44: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Management Guidelines

ESOINDIA GUIDELINESInternational Conference and Workshop,

Jan 2014,Chennai.

Page 45: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Management strategies

Surgery Surgery + adjuvant Imatinib Neoadjuvant Imatinib + surgery

Page 46: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Site specific surgery

Esophagus:

Esophagectomy

Esophageal sparing wide local excision

Stomach

Small-wedge resection

Large-subtotal/total gastrectomy

(BlumMG et al,AnnThoracSurg2007; WinfieldRDetal.AmSurg2006;

WayneJD et al SurgClinNorthAm2005).

Page 47: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Duodenum:

Partial duodenal resection

Whipple’s Procedure

Small Intestine:

Segmental resection

Colon:

Colectomy

Rectum:

Anterior resection/

Abdominoperineal resection

(Blay JY et ai.Ann Oncology 2005;16:566-57 )

Page 48: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Principles of surgery

AIM:

To obtain complete resection with maximal organ preservation with macroscopic negative margin.

Great care should be taken to avoid rupture of pseudocapsule

Re resection is generally not indicated for microscopically positive margins on final pathology

Lymphadenectomy is not required

Page 49: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Irregular borderCystic spaces

UlcerationEchogenic fociHeterogeneity

Page 50: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Resection margin

1-2 cm margin is necessary for an adequate resection

Tumor size Main determining factor for survival

Complete resection with gross negative margin is acceptable.

De Matteo et al,Ann Surg 2000

Page 51: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Esophageal GISTs

Page 52: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Gastric GIST- CECT- Coronal multiple planar reformation

Exophtic-growth

Heterogeneous enhancement.

Intact mucosa

Page 53: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Laparoscopic Approach-NCCN Guidelines

Select GISTs in favorable anatomic locations

-Greater curvature or Anterior wall of stomach

-Jejunum or ileum

Preservation of pseudo capsule

Specimen retrieval through Plastic bag

-Avoidance of tumor spillage & port site seeding

Page 54: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Minimally invasive (Privette et all-2008)

Type1: Lap. Stapled partial gastrectomy

Type2: lap.distal gastrectomy

Type3: lap.transgastric resection.

Page 55: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Lap. Transgastric ….

Page 56: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

LEGGS-Laparoscopic endoscopically-guided gastric surgery

LECS-Laparoscopic and endoscopic cooperative surgery

Page 57: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Laparoscopic and endoscopic cooperative surgery (LECS).

Mucosal&submucosal dissection – Endoscopy

Seromuscular resection by laparoscopy

Enables tumor resection with minimal surgical Margin.

Useful in esophagogastric junction or pyloric ring GISTs

Page 58: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Small bowel GISTs

May occur throughout the small intestine

Signs and symptoms of

obstruction or rarely with hemorrhage .

They may appear as intramural masses or intraluminal polyps, and may show extension into adjacent mesentery

Page 59: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Small bowel Vs Gastric GISTs

More commonly associated with Neurofibromatosis 1

More frequent exon 9 mutations

More frequently malignant

Intestinal obstruction more common than bleeding

Page 60: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Small bowel GIST-CT-exophytic mass with an irregular

margin, heterogeneous contrast enhancement,

Central gas within the tumor with a gas-fluid level (arrow).

Central calcifications (arrow).

Page 61: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Extension into the adjacent small bowel colon, bladder, ureter, and abdominal wall may occur.

D/D Adenocarcinoma

annular lesion in the proximal small intestine

Lymphoma.

similar features

associated lymphadenopathy

Page 62: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Anorectal GISTs

Well-defined, eccentric mural masses that expand the rectal wall and may contain mucosal ulceration.

The mass spreads via extension into the ischiorectal fossa, prostate, or vagina.

As in GISTs at other locations, central areas of hemorrhage can be seen

Page 63: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Rectal GIST

MRI should be used in rectal GIST as it provides better preoperative staging information

Endoscopic ultrasound and MRI assessment followed by biopsy and wide excision is the standard approach, regardless of tumor size.

Page 64: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Colonic GISTs

Transmural tumors that involve the intraluminal and extraserosal surfaces of the colon.

Cystic change, hemorrhage, necrosis, or calcification are common

Circumferential growth with secondary

dilatation of the affected colonic segment.

Page 65: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Imatinib Therapy

Page 66: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Neoadjuvant imatinib

GIST that is resectable with negative margins but with significant morbidity

A multivisceral resection is indicated

To optimize timing of surgery

To facilitate organ function-sparing resections.

Page 67: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Imatinib-Dosage

Initial dose

400 mg daily

Dose escalation

Pts with Progressive disease

Pts with KIT mutation in exon 9

Upto 800mg daily(400 mg BD) depending upon the tolerance

Page 68: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Imatinib- Duration of Threapy

Preop

6–12 months until max.response is reached

Periop

stopped 2–3 days before surgery

resumed promptly when the patient recovers from surgery.

Post op

High Risk of relapse- 3 years (Level 1 a)

Low Risk - Adjuvant therapy not recommended.

Intermediate Risk- Controversial

Page 69: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

PET-Response to imatinib

Decreases the tumour avidity for 18F-FDG

PET imaging could detect the biological activity of imatinib far earlier than changes in anatomic measures on CT scanning.

PET changes as early as 24 hours following a single dose of imatinib.

Page 70: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Sunitinib

-second-line drug treatment.

-For patients whose GIST tumors become resistant to imatinib.

  Regorafenib

-FDA-2013 approved as a third-line drug for patients whose tumors are not responding to imatinib or sunitinib.

Page 71: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Metastatic GISTs

Distant metastases most commonly involve liver (50-65%) & peritoneum (21-43%)

Only 10% of metastatic lesions occur in the lungs or bones

GISTs rarely spread to regional lymph nodes (<10%)

On presentation, 41-47% of malignant GISTs are metastatic.

Page 72: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Metastatic GISTs

Page 73: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Prognostic factors for RFS

Large tumor size, High mitotic count, Nongastric location, Presence of rupture, Male sex

(H. Joensuu et al, The Lancet 2011.)

Page 74: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

Prognosis…

The 5-year survival for malignant GIST

28 to 80%.

Median survival after incomplete surgery 10–23 months.

The median survival for metastatic or recurrent disease

12 to 19 months.

Page 75: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General

FOLLOW UP-ESMO Guidelines

High-risk patients

CT scan or MRI

Every 3–6 months for first 3 years

Every 3 months for next 2 years,

Every 6 months for next 3 years

Annually for an additional 5 years.

For low-risk tumors,

CT scan or MRI every 6–12 months for 5 years.

Very low-risk GISTs

-probably do not deserve routine followup, although one must be aware that the risk is not nil.

Page 76: Prof SM Chandramohan Professor and HOD Department of Surgical Gastroenterology Center of Excellence for Upper GI Surgery Rajiv Gandhi Government General