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Characterization of 500 Chinese patients with cervical esophageal cancer by clinicopathological and treatment outcomes

Peinan Chen, Xueke Zhao, Fuyou Zhou, Xin Song, Shou-Jia Hu, Yan Jin, Xianzeng Wang, Xuena Han, Zong-Min Fan, Ran Wang, Bei Li, Wen-Li Han, Panpan Wang, Jilin Li, Lixin Wan, Liguo Zhang, Qi-De Bao, Fu-Bao Chang, Yanru Qin, Zhiwei Chang, Jian-Wei Ku, Haijun Yang, Ling Yuan, Jingli Ren, Xuemin Li, Lidong Wang

2020Cancer Biology and Medicine22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

<h3>Objective:</h3> There are no comprehensive studies on survival outcomes and optimal treatment protocols for cervical esophageal cancer (CEC), due to its rare clinical prevalence. Our objective was to determine the relationship between pathological characteristics, treatment protocols, and survival outcomes in Chinese CEC patients. <h3>Methods:</h3> A total of 500 Chinese CEC patients were selected from our 500,000 esophageal and gastric cardia carcinoma database (1973–2018). There were two main groups: patients treated with surgery, and patients receiving non-surgical treatments (radiotherapy, radiochemotherapy, and chemotherapy). The Chi-square test and Kaplan–Meier method were used to compare the continuous variables and survival. <h3>Results:</h3> Among the 500 CEC patients, 278 (55.6%) were male, and the median age was 60.9 ± 9.4 years. A total of 496 patients (99.2%) were diagnosed with squamous cell carcinoma. In 171 (34.2%) patients who received surgery, 22 (12.9%) had undergone laryngectomy. In 322 (64.4%) patients who received non-surgical treatments, 245 (76.1%) received radiotherapy. Stratified survival analysis showed that only T stage was related with survival outcomes for CEC patients in the surgical group, and the outcomes between laryngectomy and non-laryngectomy patients were similar. It was noteworthy that the 5-year survival rate was similar in CEC patients among the different groups treated with surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, or radiochemotherapy (<i>P</i> = 0.244). <h3>Conclusions:</h3> The CEC patients had similar survival outcomes after curative esophagectomy and radiotherapy, including those with or without total laryngectomy. These findings suggest that radiotherapy could be the initial choice for treatment of Chinese CEC patients.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineLaryngectomyRadiation therapyEsophageal cancerEsophagectomyChemotherapyStage (stratigraphy)ChemoradiotherapyInternal medicineCancerSurgeryCarcinomaSurvival rateGastroenterologyLarynxBiologyPaleontologyEsophageal Cancer Research and TreatmentGastric Cancer Management and OutcomesEsophageal and GI Pathology
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