BACKGROUND: Multimodality therapy for esophageal cancer holds promise for improving outcome in this lethal disease. On the basis of encouraging data from a phase I trial, we conducted a phase II study of preoperative chemotherapy, followed by concurrent chemoradiotherapy and surgery. METHODS: Patients with clinically staged resectable esophageal cancer were treated with induction cisplatin and paclitaxel, followed by 45 Gy of external beam radiation with concurrent infusional 5-fluorouracil and weekly cisplatin and paclitaxel. Four to eight weeks after multimodality induction, esophagectomy was performed in suitable patients. Study end points were survival, pathologic complete response, and toxicity. RESULTS: Twenty-one patients were enrolled with a median age of 58 years, and all patients were clinically staged II or III. Sixteen (76.2%) patients completed the trial, of whom four (25%) had a pathologic complete response. One patient died from postoperative complications. Grade 3 or 4 toxicity was observed in 76% of patients, and dose-limiting toxicity was seen in 6 of the first 14 patients, thus necessitating a planned dose reduction of paclitaxel. At a median follow-up of 30 months, 13 patients remain alive. The 2-year disease-specific survival for the study population was 78%. CONCLUSIONS: This regimen of multimodality therapy before resection resulted in an encouraging 2-year survival rate but a disappointing rate of pathologic complete response and was toxic, necessitating a predetermined paclitaxel dose reduction. The incorporation of taxanes into induction strategies for esophageal cancer seems promising, but the optimal schedule remains undefined.
BACKGROUND: Multimodality therapy for esophageal cancer holds promise for improving outcome in this lethal disease. On the basis of encouraging data from a phase I trial, we conducted a phase II study of preoperative chemotherapy, followed by concurrent chemoradiotherapy and surgery. METHODS:Patients with clinically staged resectable esophageal cancer were treated with induction cisplatin and paclitaxel, followed by 45 Gy of external beam radiation with concurrent infusional 5-fluorouracil and weekly cisplatin and paclitaxel. Four to eight weeks after multimodality induction, esophagectomy was performed in suitable patients. Study end points were survival, pathologic complete response, and toxicity. RESULTS: Twenty-one patients were enrolled with a median age of 58 years, and all patients were clinically staged II or III. Sixteen (76.2%) patients completed the trial, of whom four (25%) had a pathologic complete response. One patient died from postoperative complications. Grade 3 or 4 toxicity was observed in 76% of patients, and dose-limiting toxicity was seen in 6 of the first 14 patients, thus necessitating a planned dose reduction of paclitaxel. At a median follow-up of 30 months, 13 patients remain alive. The 2-year disease-specific survival for the study population was 78%. CONCLUSIONS: This regimen of multimodality therapy before resection resulted in an encouraging 2-year survival rate but a disappointing rate of pathologic complete response and was toxic, necessitating a predetermined paclitaxel dose reduction. The incorporation of taxanes into induction strategies for esophageal cancer seems promising, but the optimal schedule remains undefined.
Authors: Aminah Jatoi; Gamini Soori; Nathan R Foster; Bradley K Hiatt; James A Knost; Tom R Fitch; Matthew D Callister; Francis C Nichols; Tim M Husted; Steven R Alberts Journal: J Thorac Oncol Date: 2010-12 Impact factor: 15.609
Authors: Matthew D Wood; Bassem I Zaki; Stuart R Gordon; John E Sutton; Mikhail Lisovsky; Jiang Gui; Jeffrey A Bubis; Konstantin H Dragnev; James R Rigas Journal: J Thorac Oncol Date: 2013-04 Impact factor: 15.609
Authors: Andre A Konski; Jonathan D Cheng; Melvyn Goldberg; Tianyu Li; Alan Maurer; Jian Q Yu; Oleh Haluszka; Walter Scott; Neal J Meropol; Steven J Cohen; Gary Freedman; Louis M Weiner Journal: Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys Date: 2007-05-29 Impact factor: 7.038
Authors: Tak Yun; Ji-Youn Han; Jin Soo Lee; Hyun Lee Choi; Hyae Young Kim; Byung-Ho Nam; Heung Tae Kim Journal: BMC Cancer Date: 2011-09-02 Impact factor: 4.430