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Efficacy of Endoscopic Resection and Selective Chemoradiotherapy for Stage I Esophageal Squamous Cell Carcinoma.

Authors :
Minashi, Keiko
Nihei, Keiji
Mizusawa, Junki
Takizawa, Kohei
Yano, Tomonori
Ezoe, Yasumasa
Tsuchida, Tomohiro
Ono, Hiroyuki
Iizuka, Toshiro
Hanaoka, Noboru
Oda, Ichiro
Morita, Yoshinori
Tajika, Masahiro
Fujiwara, Junko
Yamamoto, Yoshinobu
Katada, Chikatoshi
Hori, Shinichiro
Doyama, Hisashi
Oyama, Tsuneo
Nebiki, Hiroko
Source :
Gastroenterology (00165085); Aug2019, Vol. 157 Issue 2, p382-382, 1p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Esophagectomy is the standard treatment for stage I esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC). We conducted a single-arm prospective study to confirm the efficacy and safety of selective chemoradiotherapy (CRT) based on findings from endoscopic resection (ER). We performed a prospective study of patients with T1b (SM1–2) N0M0 thoracic ESCC from December 2006 through July 2012; 176 patients underwent ER. Based on the findings from ER, patients received the following: no additional treatment for patients with pT1a tumors with a negative resection margin and no lymphovascular invasion (group A); prophylactic CRT with 41.4 Gy delivered to locoregional lymph nodes for patients with pT1b tumors with a negative resection margin or pT1a tumors with lymphovascular invasion (group B); or definitive CRT (50.4 Gy) with a 9-Gy boost to the primary site for patients with a positive vertical resection margin (group C). Chemotherapy comprised 5-fluorouracil and cisplatin. The primary end point was 3-year overall survival in group B, and the key secondary end point was 3-year overall survival for all patients. If lower limits of 90% confidence intervals for the primary and key secondary end points exceeded the 80% threshold, the efficacy of combined ER and selective CRT was confirmed. Based on the results from pathology analysis, 74, 87, and 15 patients were categorized into groups A, B, and C, respectively. The 3-year overall survival rates were 90.7% for group B (90% confidence interval, 84.0%–94.7%) and 92.6% in all patients (90% confidence interval, 88.5%–95.2%). In a prospective study of patients with T1b (SM1–2) N0M0 thoracic ESCC, we confirmed the efficacy of the combination of ER and selective CRT. Efficacy is comparable to that of surgery, and the combination of ER and selective CRT should be considered as a minimally invasive treatment option. UMIN-Clinical Trials Registry no.: UMIN000000553. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00165085
Volume :
157
Issue :
2
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Gastroenterology (00165085)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
137590942
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1053/j.gastro.2019.04.017