| Literature DB >> 34905130 |
Yoshiki Kaneko1,2, Katsuji Hisakura3, Koichi Ogawa1, Yoshimasa Akashi1, Yusuke Ohara1, Yohei Owada1, Tsuyoshi Enomoto1, Kinji Furuya1, Shoko Moue1, Manami Doi1, Kazuhiro Takahashi1, Osamu Shimomura1, Shinji Hashimoto1, Noriaki Sakamoto4, Tsunehiko Maruyama1,2, Tatsuya Oda1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The treatment for the locally advanced esophageal cancer invading adjacent organs is controversial. We performed a radical surgery for a patient suffering from lower esophageal cancer with pancreatic invasion, and led to long-term survival. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Esophagectomy; Locally advanced esophageal cancer; Pancreatectomy; Pancreatic invasion
Year: 2021 PMID: 34905130 PMCID: PMC8671581 DOI: 10.1186/s40792-021-01338-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Case Rep ISSN: 2198-7793
Fig. 1Esophagogastroduodenoscopy revealed the circumferential type2 lesion of lower esophagus (35–45 cm from the incisors). Only small caliber scope was allowed to through the lesion due to severe stenosis. The lesion directly invaded to gastric fundus
Fig. 2Findings of computed tomography. a Thickened wall as primary lesion was observed from the lower esophagus to fundus of stomach (arrow). b A solitary metastatic abdominal lymph node measuring 56 mm made a mass and invaded to lesser curvature and pancreatic body (arrow)
Fig. 3Findings after resection. a Cut end of pancreas was revealed at the ventral side of splenic vein at the junction of infra mesenteric vain (arrow). The bilateral pulmonary ligaments were also resected, because primary tumor invasion was suspected. Descending aorta, epicardium and bilateral lung was observed through esophageal hiatus (arrow heads: the cut end of bilateral pulmonary ligaments). b The gastric conduit. The lesser curvature of gastric body was resected, because the metastatic lymph node was invaded (arrow heads)
Fig.4Resected specimen findings. Primary lesion was observed from lower esophagus to esophagogastric junction (type 3 tumor, measuring 75 × 55 × 15 mm in size). Metastatic lymph node was fixed to stomach and pancreas (measuring 70 × 50 × 40 mm in size)
Fig.5Histopathological findings (Hematoxylin and eosin staining). a, b Esophagus and primary lesion. Tumor invaded adventitia, but not adjacent organs. c, d Pancreas and metastatic lymph node. The infiltration of metastatic lymph node into pancreas was observed
Reported cases of esophagectomy with distal pancreatectomy for locally advanced esophageal cancer
| Age, Sex | Reason (pancreatectomy) | Operative procedure/reconstruction method | Reccurence | Prognosis | Report (year) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 53, Male | Primary tumor invaded | Left thoraco-laparotomic inferior esophagectomy Total gastrectomy, Distal pancreatectomy Lateral segmentectomy of the liver/Roux-en Y | ND (Lymph node) | 10 M (alive) | Matsubara et al. (2003) |
| 62, Male | Metastatic tumor (stomach) invaded | Right thoraco-laparotomic lower esophagectomy, total gastrectomy, distal pancreatectomy/Roux-en Y | 10 M (Lymph node) | 16 M (dead) | Hata et al. (2007) |
| 52, Male | Metastatic lymph node ivaded | Right thoraco-laparotomic subtotal esophagectomy Distal pancreatectomy/gastric conduit (postmediastinal route) | None | 84 M (alive) | Saito et al. (2011) |
| 59, Male | Metastatic tumor (stomach) invaded | Right thoraco-laparotomic subtotal esophagectomy Partial gastrectomy, Left lateral segmentectomy of liver Distal pancreatectomy/gastric conduit | ND (Pleural dissemination) | 6 M (dead) | Nakazawa et al. (2012) |
| 64, Male | Metastatic lymph node ivaded | Right thoraco-laparotomic subtotal esophagectomy Distal pancreatectomy/Roux-en Y and gastric conduit | 7 M (Liver) | 18 M (dead) | Nishiwaki et al. (2018) |
| 62, Male | Metastatic lymph node ivaded | Right thoraco-laparotomic subtotal esophagectomy Distal pancreatectomy/gastric conduit (postmediastinal route) | None | 84 M (alive) | Our case |