AI Article Synopsis

  • In Japan, the standard treatment for resectable esophageal cancer is neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) followed by surgery (esophagectomy), while patients unable to undergo surgery typically receive definitive chemoradiotherapy (CRT).
  • Effective local disease control is crucial, and endoscopic evaluation post-treatment is essential for assessing treatment effectiveness and guiding further interventions.
  • The "Japanese Classification of Esophageal Cancer, 12th edition" introduces new criteria for evaluating treatment response and emphasizes the importance of detecting local recurrence to identify candidates for salvage treatments early.

Article Abstract

In Japan, standard of care of the patients with resectable esophageal cancer is neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) followed by esophagectomy. Patients unfitted for surgery or with unresectable locally advanced esophageal cancer are generally indicated with definitive chemoradiotherapy (CRT). Local disease control is undoubtful important for the management of patients with esophageal cancer, therefore endoscopic evaluation of local efficacy after non-surgical treatments must be essential. The significant shrink of primary site after NAC has been reported as a good indicator of pathological good response as well as favorable survival outcome after esophagectomy. And patients who could achieve remarkable shrink to T1 level after CRT had favorable outcomes with salvage surgery and could be good candidates for salvage endoscopic treatments. Based on these data, "Japanese Classification of Esophageal Cancer, 12th edition" defined the new endoscopic criteria "remarkable response (RR)", that means significant volume reduction after treatment, with the subjective endoscopic evaluation are proposed. In addition, the finding of local recurrence (LR) at primary site after achieving a CR was also proposed in the latest edition of Japanese Classification of Esophageal Cancer. The findings of LR are also important for detecting candidates for salvage endoscopic treatments at an early timing during surveillance after CRT. The endoscopic evaluation would encourage us to make concrete decisions for further treatment indications, therefore physicians treating patients with esophageal cancer should be well-acquainted with each finding.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10388-024-01043-1DOI Listing

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