The optimal management of patients with resection line involvement after endoscopic or surgical treatment for gastric cancer is debated. In contrast to previous reports, we examined both the experience of endoscopists and surgeons in early-stage lesions and the wide variation in treatments proposed for advanced disease in case of infiltration of resection margins. A PubMed search for papers using the key words: gastric or stomach cancer, or Carcinoma; gastrectomy and positive margins; surgical margins or resection line or endoscopic margin involvement; and R1 resection, from January 2000 to July 2015 was undertaken. Fifty-three studies were considered pertinent to the study. Many endoscopists report that some cases of early gastric cancer with resection line involvement after endoscopic resection have good outcomes notwithstanding incomplete resection, but few surgeons share this opinion. Conversely, it is unanimously agreed that very advanced stages should not be surgically retreated because they are expression of systemic disease. Between early and very advanced cancer the usefulness of re-resection for microscopic resection lines involvement is still debated and surgery may be proposed only when radicality can be achieved. When surgery is not feasible, radiochemotherapy may represent a valid alternative.
Keywords: Endoscopic submucosal dissection; Frozen section; Gastric cancer; Infiltrated resection margin; R1 resection; Radiochemotherapy; Resection line involvement.