# Survival benefit of perioperative chemoradiotherapy in patients with resectable primary gastric adenosquamous carcinoma: a population-based cohort study

**Authors:** Di Wu, Jie Li, Bai-Shu Dai, Qi-Ying Song, Peng Chen, Ming-Yu Gu, Bing-He Zhao, Lu Liu, Zheng-Yao Chang, Wen-Xing Gao, Wen Zhao, Shuo Li, De-Bin Zheng, Tian-Yu Xie, Xin-Xin Wang, Lin Chen

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2025.1540106 · Frontiers in Oncology · 2025-07-02

## TL;DR

This study finds that perioperative chemoradiotherapy improves survival in patients with resectable gastric adenosquamous carcinoma.

## Contribution

The study provides evidence that perioperative chemoradiotherapy is beneficial for specific subgroups of gastric adenosquamous carcinoma patients.

## Key findings

- Patients receiving perioperative chemoradiotherapy had significantly better overall and cancer-specific survival.
- Subgroup analysis identified younger patients and those with advanced tumor stages as benefiting most from chemoradiotherapy.
- Combined chemoradiotherapy outperformed chemotherapy alone in improving survival outcomes.

## Abstract

Currently, whether Gastric adenosquamous carcinoma (GASC) can benefit from perioperative chemoradiotherapy (pCRT) remains controversial. The objective of this study was to evaluate the survival benefit of pCRT in resectable GASC.

Patients diagnosed with GASC were selected from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program and our medical center. Enrolled patients were stratified into two cohorts according to whether they underwent perioperative chemotherapy and radiotherapy or not, and the overall survival (OS) and cancer-specific survival (CSS) of the two cohorts were compared. Subsequent subgroup analysis was performed to identify the population that could demonstrably benefit from chemoradiotherapy.

We screened almost 180,000 cases of gastric malignant neoplasms. Finally, only 267 patients with GASC met the inclusion criteria and were eventually included in the study, with 147 and 120 patients in the pCRT and non-pCRT groups, respectively. The baseline information of the two groups showed no statistically significant differences. Patients in the pCRT group had superior OS (26.0 vs. 13.0 months, p=0.002) and CSS (26.0 vs. 14.0 months, p=0.004). Univariate and multivariate COX regression analyses demonstrated that pCRT was an independent protective factor for favorable OS and CSS with in patients with GASC and age, race, tumor size, T stage, N stage and TNM stage were also independent predictors of survival. Subgroup analysis indicated that the GASC population aged ≤ 66 years, non-EGJ, tumor > 5 cm, tumor differentiation degree 3-4, T3-4 stage, N2-3, and TNM III-IV could significantly benefit from pCRT. The combined chemotherapy with radiotherapy group significantly improved OS and CSS of GASC compared to chemotherapy alone.

This retrospective study verified that pCRT could improve the long-term OS and CSS of patients with GASC. Subgroup analysis found that patients with aged ≤ 66 years, tumor differentiation grade 3-4, T3-4, N2-3, and TNM III-IV could gain significant benefits from perioperative chemoradiotherapy. Moreover, the study demonstrated that patients with GASC receiving combined radiotherapy and chemotherapy had superior OS and CSS compared to those receiving chemotherapy alone, implying the crucial role of radiotherapy. This study provides an excellent evidence-based medical reference for GASC treatment.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Gastric adenosquamous carcinoma (MONDO:0006034)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** GASC (MESH:D018196), cancer (MESH:D009369), gastric malignant neoplasms (MESH:D013274), TNM III-IV (MESH:D006011)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

45 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12263382/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12263382