Impact of neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy on postoperative outcomes after esophageal cancer resection: results of a European multicenter study.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_790B3765D72B
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Impact of neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy on postoperative outcomes after esophageal cancer resection: results of a European multicenter study.
Journal
Annals of Surgery
Author(s)
Gronnier C., Tréchot B., Duhamel A., Mabrut J.Y., Bail J.P., Carrere N., Lefevre J.H., Brigand C., Vaillant J.C., Adham M., Msika S., Demartines N., El Nakadi I., Piessen G., Meunier B., Collet D., Mariette C.
Working group(s)
FREGAT Working GroupFRENCHAFC
ISSN
1528-1140 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0003-4932
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2014
Volume
260
Number
5
Pages
764-771
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To assess the impact of neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (NCRT) on anastomotic leakage (AL) and other postoperative outcomes after esophageal cancer (EC) resection.
BACKGROUND: Conflicting data have emerged from randomized studies regarding the impact of NCRT on AL.
METHODS: Among 2944 consecutive patients operated on for EC between 2000 and 2010 in 30 European centers, patients treated by NCRT after surgery (n = 593) were compared with those treated by primary surgery (n = 1487). Multivariable analyses and propensity score matching were used to compensate for the differences in some baseline characteristics.
RESULTS: Patients in the NCRT group were younger, with a higher prevalence of male sex, malnutrition, advanced tumor stage, squamous cell carcinoma, and surgery after 2005 when compared with the primary surgery group. Postoperative AL rates were 8.8% versus 10.6% (P = 0.220), and 90-day postoperative mortality and morbidity rates were 9.3% versus 7.2% (P = 0.110) and 33.4% versus 32.1% (P = 0.564), respectively. Pulmonary complication rates did not differ between groups (24.6% vs 22.5%; P = 0.291), whereas chylothorax (2.5% vs 1.2%; P = 0.020), cardiovascular complications (8.6% vs 0.1%; P = 0.037), and thromboembolic events (8.6% vs 6.0%; P = 0.037) were higher in the NCRT group. After propensity score matching, AL rates were 8.8% versus 11.3% (P = 0.228), with more chylothorax (2.5% vs 0.7%; P = 0.030) and trend toward more cardiovascular and thromboembolic events in the NCRT group (P = 0.069). Predictors of AL were high American Society of Anesthesiologists scores, supracarinal tumoral location, and cervical anastomosis, but not NCRT.
CONCLUSIONS: Neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy does not have an impact on the AL rate after EC resection (NCT 01927016).
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
27/11/2014 19:16
Last modification date
27/02/2024 8:17
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