309. SURGICAL TREATMENT FOR THE RECURRENT SITE OF ESOPHAGEAL CANCER AFTER ESOPHAGECTOMY
Hiroshi Okamoto, Yusuke Taniyama, Chiaki Sato, Yohei Ozawa, Hirotaka Ishida, Ken Koseki, Yuto Muranami, Takashi Kamei- Gastroenterology
- General Medicine
Abstract
Background
Although the outcome of patients with recurrent esophageal cancer following radical esophagectomy is extremely poor, long-term survival can be achieved with multimodal therapy, including surgical resection of the recurrent lesion. Developing a treatment strategy is a critical issue; therefore, we examined the indications and optimal timing for surgical treatment in patients with recurrence.
Methods
A total of 184 patients with recurrent esophageal cancer after radical esophagectomy were studied between 2001 and 2015, with a focus on surgical resection.
Results
The first recurrence site was the lymph nodes (124 cases; 67%) [neck (35; 19%), mediastinum (82; 45%), abdomen (35; 19%)], lung (36; 20%), liver (32; 17%), pleura (18; 10%), bone (13; 7%), etc. Second-line treatment following recurrence was surgery (8 cases), chemoradiotherapy (89 cases), chemotherapy (64 cases), and best supportive care (23 cases). Patients with single organ or solitary recurrence and recurrence more than 8 months after surgery had better prognoses. All the surgical cases had single-site recurrence (lung-3, cervical lymph nodes-3, colon-1, and brain-1). Good prognosis was expected for the patients with lung or cervical lymph node recurrence.
Conclusion
Surgical treatment for recurrent esophageal cancer following radical esophagectomy was considered beneficial for the recurrence of cervical lymph node or lung metastasis of solitary lesions at least 8 months after esophagectomy. Immune checkpoint inhibitors have recently been indicated for esophageal cancer and expected for improving prognosis, and the role of surgery in multidisciplinary treatment for metastatic recurrence needs repeated investigation.