AI Article Synopsis

  • Treatment for esophageal cancer is shifting from primarily palliative care to more proactive approaches, including preoperative chemo- and radiation therapy, which enhances surgical outcomes.
  • A study involving 29 patients in the Spokane area (mostly older men with adenocarcinoma) showed promising results from a treatment regimen including chemotherapy and radiation before surgery.
  • While 79% of patients had no residual cancer post-surgery, metastatic cancer remains a major concern, highlighting the need for ongoing monitoring and research in esophageal cancer treatments.

Article Abstract

Background: Treatment of esophageal cancer has been primarily palliative. Recent studies have shown that preoperative combination chemo- and radiation therapy increases the effectiveness of surgical excision.

Patients And Methods: Beginning in 1990, 29 patients in the Spokane area were treated with preoperative chemo- and radiation therapy. They were 23 men and 6 women whose mean age was 66 years. Twenty-five had adenocarcinoma, of whom 3 had Barrett's esophagitis. Four had squamous cell carcinoma. The chemotherapy included fluorouracil, cisplatin, and vinblastine. Radiation was given concomitantly, BID for 21 days. Surgical excision was performed about 3 weeks after the last radiation session, pending recovery from cytopenia.

Results: There was 1 operative death, for an operative mortality of 3.4%. Twenty-three patients (79%) were found to have no residual cancer at the time of resection. Of this group, 8 died of metastatic cancer at a mean of 15 months postoperatively (range 1 to 28), and 15 were alive at a mean of 28 months (range 12 to 46). Six patients (21%) had residual cancer in the resected specimen, either at the primary site or--more often--in adjacent lymph nodes. Five have died at 6, 8, 9, 24, and 28 months postoperatively; 1 remains alive at 14 months. The mean survival among these 6 patients is 15 months.

Conclusions: Combined chemo- and radiation therapy prior to esophagectomy appeared to improve outcome in this small series of patients with esophageal cancer. Local control was excellent, but distant metastasis continues to be a significant problem.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0002-9610(99)80218-9DOI Listing

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