4.5 Article

Can Clinical Response Predict Pathologic Response Following Neoadjuvant Chemoradiation for Esophageal Cancer?

Journal

JOURNAL OF GASTROINTESTINAL SURGERY
Volume 26, Issue 7, Pages 1345-1351

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11605-022-05315-y

Keywords

Pathologic response; Neoadjuvant therapy; Esophageal cancer; PET scan; Esophageal ultrasound; Esophageal biopsy

Funding

  1. Medstar Surgical Resident Research Program

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This study assessed the correlation between clinical complete response (ycCR) and pathologic complete response (ypCR) and found that current restaging tools cannot reliably predict ypCR after neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (nCRT). Although multimodal restaging appears to be a more accurate predictor of ypCR than any individual testing modality, ycCR cannot be relied upon to determine the need for esophagectomy.
Objectives Approximately 20-40% of patients with locally advanced esophageal cancer will achieve a pathologic complete response (ypCR) following neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (nCRT). Predicting ypCR based on a clinical complete response (ycCR) has been a challenge. This study assessed the correlation between ycCR and ypCR, as determined from esophagectomy specimens. Methods Patients undergoing esophagectomy following nCRT at three major institutions between 2005 and 2018 were reviewed. Restaging, including PET/CT, endoscopy with biopsy, and esophageal ultrasound (EUS), was performed to determine ycCR. Results Six hundred sixty patients were included, with 93.3% with esophageal adenocarcinoma histology. Six hundred fifty-eight of these patients underwent PET, 304 EUS, and 584 underwent a biopsy. Following nCRT, 148 (22.4%) were found to have a ypCR. Only 12/32 (37.5%) determined to have a ycCR were found to have a ypCR, while 136/628 (21.6%) with a non-ycCR were found to have a ypCR (p 0.075). Individual modality PPV was 28% for PET, 54% for EUS, and 26% for biopsy. When PET was combined with EUS, 168 reports were concordant and the PPV of ypCR was 50%, though the number of patients was low (1/2). With all 3 re-staging modalities combined, the PPV and NPV both rose to 100%. Conclusions Current restaging tools cannot reliably predict ypCR after nCRT. While multimodal restaging appears to be a more accurate predictor of ypCR than any testing modality alone, patients cannot reliably be advised to avoid an esophagectomy on the assumption that ycCR predicts ypCR at this time.

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