| Literature DB >> 19358615 |
Abstract
Oesophageal and gastric cancers are amongst the most frequent and lethal of cancers worldwide. In the US alone, some 13 000 individuals are affected each year, and mortality is particularly high in elderly patients with advanced stage disease and multiple co-morbidities. Patients usually do not present until later in the disease when symptoms occur, once the tumour is sufficiently large to cause obstruction or invasion of adjacent structures. Oesophageal cancer can metastasize to almost any organ, and widespread distant metastases are almost always present at the time of death. Overall mortality from this cancer is around 80-90%. Curative treatment of oesophageal cancer must achieve local control of the primary lesion as well as control and/or prevention of metastases. These are important contributors to overall results when therapy is undertaken in elderly patients, as are the significant risks of adverse effects such as morbidity from chemoradiation and the morbidity and mortality of oesophagectomy. Surgical resection affords the best chance for local control and the best means of palliation of dysphagia for most patients with localized disease, although both local and systemic recurrence of disease are common when surgery is used alone. Because of the low cure rates associated with the use of surgery alone, other modalities have been added to the treatment regimen. Elderly patients with significant cardiac and pulmonary co-morbidity are candidates for nonoperative therapy, even at an early disease stage. There are few data to support a survival advantage from adjuvant radiotherapy or chemotherapy following complete resection, in the absence of documented metastatic disease. Chemotherapy and radiotherapy have both been reported to improve survival when administered preoperatively in patients with oesophageal cancer, while current data using trimodal therapy show a trend towards increased treatment-related mortality with only a slight increase in overall survival. There is currently no completely reliable preoperative method for restaging patients following neoadjuvant chemoradiation in order to assess pathological complete response. Novel restaging techniques are therefore required, in addition to further study of the risks and benefits of neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy for this disease.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19358615 DOI: 10.2165/00002512-200926030-00001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drugs Aging ISSN: 1170-229X Impact factor: 3.923