4.6 Article Proceedings Paper

Effects of preoperative chemoradiotherapy on postsurgical morbidity and mortality in cT3-4+/- cM1lymph cancer of the oesophagus and gastro-oesophageal junction

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CARDIO-THORACIC SURGERY
Volume 24, Issue 2, Pages 179-186

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S1010-7940(03)00274-4

Keywords

carcinoma of the esophagus/gastroesophageal junction; induction chemoradiotherapy; postoperative mortality; postoperative morbidity; lymphadenectomy

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Objective: Very few studies have examined post-operative morbidity after resection of oesophageal carcinoma, especially in patients treated with induction chemo- and radiotherapy for locally advanced stages. This study assessed the effects of induction chemoradiotherapy on post-operative course after resection of locally advanced oesophageal carcinoma ((c)T3-4 + (c)M1(lymph)). Methods: Induction therapy consisted of 5-fluorouracil days 1-5 and days 21-25, cisplatin day 1 + day 21 and concomitant radiotherapy 18-20 fractions of 2 Gy (total dose 36-40 Gy). Induction chemoradiotherapy was completed in 109 patients. Surgery was performed in 90 patients (operability: 90/109 = 83%): 85 patients underwent resection with curative intent (resectability: 85/109 = 78%), bypass operation was performed in five patients. Nineteen patients could not be operated on. Results were compared to a matched group of pT3M1(LYM)/pT4 patients (n = 86) who underwent primary surgery in the same period. Results: Resection was complete (R0) in 68 patients (68/90 = 76%). Mean duration of surgery was 428 min (range: 240-690). Peroperative complications were haemorrhage in three patients (3/90 = 3.3%), tracheobronchial perforation in three patients (3/90 = 3.3%). Median total hospital stay was 20.5 days (range: 8-355). Mean duration of intubation was 7 days (range: 1-190); 67 patients (67/90 = 74.4%) were intubated for less than 24 h. Non-tumour related hospital mortality after resection was 8.3% (7/84 patients). Mortality after two-field lymphadenectomy was 5.2 versus 11.7% after three-field lymphadenectomy. After primary surgery (n = 86) overall mortality was 2.3% (P = 0.015) and nil after two- and three-field lymphadenectomy (P = 0.011). Medical morbidity consisted of pneumonia in 43 patients (43/90 = 48%), atelectasis in ten patients (10/90 = 11%), dysrhythmia in 21 patients (21/90 = 23%), sepsis in 11 patients (11/90 = 12%) and adult respiratory distress syndrome in ten patients (10/90 = 11%). Surgical morbidity included pleural effusion in 16 patients (16/90 = 18%), tracheal fistula in two patients (2/90 = 2%), chylothorax in two patients (2/90 = 2%) and acute pancreatitis in one patient (1/90 = 1%). Ten patients (10/90 = 11%) had a radiologically confirmed anastomotic leak; however only in four out of them with clinical manifestation; treatment was conservative in all four patients. Major morbidity occurred in 27 patients (27/90 = 30%). Overall rate of morbidity was significantly higher after three-field lymphadenectomy (85%) as compared to two-field lymphadenectomy (68.7%; P = 0.023). Conclusions: Chemoradiotherapy followed by resection of (c)T3-4 +/- cM1(lymph) oesophageal carcinoma is feasible with acceptable mortality. Mortality, however, seems to be significantly higher when compared to a group of pT3M1(LYM)/pT4 patients who underwent primary surgery (8.3 versus 2.3%; P = 0.015) in the same period in our department. (C) 2003 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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