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Cancer Recurrence After Esophagectomy: Impact of Postoperative Infection in Propensity-Matched Cohorts

Authors :
Inderpal S. Sarkaria
James D. Luketich
Katie S. Nason
Daniel G. Winger
Neil A. Christie
Manisha Shende
Ryan M. Levy
Vernissia Tam
Omar Awais
Source :
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery. 102:1638-1646
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2016.

Abstract

Background Postoperative infection increases cancer recurrence and worsens survival in colorectal cancer, but the relationship for esophagogastric adenocarcinoma after esophagectomy is not well defined. We aimed to determine whether recurrence and survival after minimally invasive esophagectomy for esophagogastric adenocarcinoma were influenced by postoperative infection using propensity-matched analysis. Methods We abstracted data for 810 patients (1997–2010) and defined exposure as at least 1 in-hospital or 30-day infectious complication (n = 206 [25%]). Using 29 pretreatment/intraoperative variables, patients were propensity-score matched (caliper = 0.05). Time to cancer recurrence and survival (Kaplan-Meier curves and the Breslow test), and associated factors (Cox regression with shared frailty) were assessed. Results After propensity matching (n = 167 pairs), median bias across propensity-score variables was reduced from 12.9% ( p p = 1.000). Postoperative infection was not associated with rate (n = 60 versus 63; McNemar p = 0.736) or time to recurrence in those in whom disease recurred (median, 10.7 versus 11.1 months; Wilcoxon signed-rank p = 0.455) but was associated with shorter overall survival (n = 124 versus 102 deaths; median, 26 versus 41 months; Breslow p = 0.002). After adjusting for age, body mass index, neoadjuvant therapy, sex, comorbidity score, positive resection margins, pathologic stage, R0 resection, and recurrence, postoperative infection was associated with a 44% greater hazard for death (hazard ratio, 1.44; 95% confidence interval, 1.10–1.89). Conclusions In patients with esophagogastric adenocarcinoma, infections after esophagectomy were not associated with an increased rate or earlier time to recurrence when baseline characteristics associated with infection risk were balanced using propensity-score matching. Despite this, overall survival was shorter in patients with infectious complications. After adjusting for other important survival predictors, infections after esophagectomy continued to be independently associated with worse survival.

Details

ISSN :
00034975
Volume :
102
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........642f7523e643a2684cbb53fe43731dac