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Worldwide Esophageal Cancer Collaboration: neoadjuvant pathologic staging data.

Authors :
Rice TW
Lerut TE
Orringer MB
Chen LQ
Hofstetter WL
Smithers BM
Rusch VW
van Lanschot J
Chen KN
Davies AR
D'Journo XB
Kesler KA
Luketich JD
Ferguson MK
Räsänen JV
van Hillegersberg R
Fang W
Durand L
Allum WH
Cecconello I
Cerfolio RJ
Pera M
Griffin SM
Burger R
Liu JF
Allen MS
Law S
Watson TJ
Darling GE
Scott WJ
Duranceau A
Denlinger CE
Schipper PH
Ishwaran H
Apperson-Hansen C
DiPaola LM
Semple ME
Blackstone EH
Source :
Diseases of the esophagus : official journal of the International Society for Diseases of the Esophagus [Dis Esophagus] 2016 Oct; Vol. 29 (7), pp. 715-723.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

To address uncertainty of whether pathologic stage groupings after neoadjuvant therapy (ypTNM) for esophageal cancer share prognostic implications with pathologic groupings after esophagectomy alone (pTNM), we report data-simple descriptions of patient characteristics, cancer categories, and non-risk-adjusted survival-for pathologically staged cancers after neoadjuvant therapy from the Worldwide Esophageal Cancer Collaboration (WECC). Thirty-three institutions from six continents submitted data using variables with standard definitions: demographics, comorbidities, clinical cancer categories, and all-cause mortality from first management decision. Of 7,773 pathologically staged neoadjuvant patients, 2,045 had squamous cell carcinoma, 5,686 adenocarcinoma, 31 adenosquamous carcinoma, and 11 undifferentiated carcinoma. Patients were older (61 years) men (83%) with normal (40%) or overweight (35%) body mass index, 0-1 Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status (96%), and a history of smoking (69%). Cancers were ypT0 (20%), ypT1 (13%), ypT2 (18%), ypT3 (44%), ypN0 (55%), ypM0 (94%), and G2-G3 (72%); most involved the distal esophagus (80%). Non-risk-adjusted survival for yp categories was unequally depressed, more for earlier categories than later, compared with equivalent categories from prior WECC data for esophagectomy-alone patients. Thus, survival of patients with ypT0-2N0M0 cancers was intermediate and similar regardless of ypT; survival for ypN+ cancers was poor. Because prognoses for ypTNM and pTNM categories are dissimilar, prognostication should be based on separate ypTNM categories and groupings. These data will be the basis for the 8th edition cancer staging manuals following risk adjustment for patient, cancer, and treatment characteristics and should direct 9th edition data collection.<br /> (© 2016 International Society for Diseases of the Esophagus.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1442-2050
Volume :
29
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Diseases of the esophagus : official journal of the International Society for Diseases of the Esophagus
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
27731548
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/dote.12513