1 Sep 2009Article
Multimodal treatment for oesophageal primary cancer. A preliminary study
Duilio Divisi 1Margherita Garramone 1Gabriella Leonardo 2Daniela Valente 2Guido Torresini 3Gabriele Giacopo 3Berardo Berardis 3Roberto Crisci 1
Affiliations
Article Info
1 Department of Thoracic Surgery, University of L’Aquila, “G. Mazzini” Hospital, Teramo, Italy
2 Department of General Medicine, University of L’Aquila, “S. Salvatore” Hospital, L’Aquila, Italy
3 Department of General Surgery, “G. Mazzini” Hospital, Teramo, Italy
Ann. Ital. Chir., 2009, 80(5), 351-356;
Published: 1 Sep 2009
Copyright © 2009 Annali Italiani di Chirurgia
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This study examines the role of chemoradiotherapy, surgical reconstructive techniques of the esophagus and lymphadenectomy in relation to morbidity and mortality. METHODS. From January 2005 to January 2008 we observed 18 patients with esophagus cancer. Eleven patients manifested a lesion of the middle thirdy, 4 patients had a lesion of the upper third and 3 patients had a lesion of the lower third. Preoperative histological evaluation revealed 3 adenocarcinomas and 15 squamous carcinomas. Four patients with a lesion of the upper third received neoadjuvant chemotherapy. RESULTS: In 13 patients reconstruction used stomach and 5 patients underwent reconstruction with the colon. Complications ensued in 3 of the latter: dehiscence of the anastomosis, anastomotic stenosis and chylothorax. Three patients highlighted a moderate malabsorption syndrome. A T3N1M0 patient received postoperative cisplatin/5-fluorouracil and radiation therapy. CONCLUSIONS: The use of the stomach represents the therapeutic gold standard for minimized incidence of complications. Lymphadenectomy allows to establish a precise stage of cancer. Chemoradiotherapy is recommended in case of risk of relapse.
Keywords
- Esophagus Primary Cancer
- Complications
- Chemotherapy
- Lymphadenectomy
- Radiotherapy
- Surgical treatment