1. Modern oncological and operative outcomes in oesophageal cancer: the St. James's hospital experience.
- Author
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Donlon, Noel E., Ravi, Narayanasamy, King, Sinead, Cunninhgam, Moya, Cuffe, Sinead, Lowery, Maeve, Wall, Carmel, Hughes, Niall, Muldoon, Cian, Ryan, Ciara, Moore, Jenny, O'Farrell, Catherine, Gorry, Claire, Duff, Ann-Marie, Enright, Cathy, Nugent, Tim S., Elliot, Jessie A., Donohoe, Claire L., and Reynolds, John V.
- Abstract
Background: Oesophageal cancer has a reputation for poor survival, and a relatively high risk of major postoperative morbidity and mortality. Encouragingly, a recent international cancer registry study reports a doubling of survival outcomes in Ireland over the last 20 years. This study focused on both oncologic and operative outcomes in patients treated with curative intent requiring surgery at a high-volume center. Methods: All patients undergoing surgery or multimodal therapy with curative intent from 2009 to 2018 were studied. All data was recorded prospectively and maintained internally. The period 2009–2013 was compared with 2014–2018 to monitor any change in trends. Results: Four hundred and seventy-five patients (adenocarcinoma 77%, mean age 65; 76% male; 64% neoadjuvant therapy) underwent open surgical resection, 54% via en bloc 2-stage, 19.8% en bloc 3-stage, and 26.5% by a transhiatal approach. New onset atrial fibrillation was the commonest index complication, in 108 (22.7%), 80 (18%) developed suspected pneumonia/respiratory tract infection, 20 (4.2%) an anastomotic leak, and 25 (5.2%) a chyle leak. The 90-day mortality rate was 1.2% and 0.8% at 30 days. The median survival was 77.17 months, with a 5-year survival of 56%. Conclusion: Consistent with registry data on population survival for oesophageal cancer, this study highlights markedly improved survival outcomes in patients treated curatively, reflecting international trends, as well as low mortality rates; however, cardiorespiratory complications remain significant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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