Long-term Outcome of 2920 Patients With Cancers of the Esophagus and Esophagogastric Junction

Adult Aged, 80 and over Male Adolescent Esophageal Neoplasms Biopsy, Needle Adenocarcinoma Combined Modality Therapy Immunohistochemistry Disease-Free Survival 3. Good health Cohort Studies Esophagectomy 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Chemotherapy, Adjuvant Germany Carcinoma, Squamous Cell Humans Female Esophagogastric Junction Aged Follow-Up Studies
DOI: 10.1097/sla.0b013e31821111b5 Publication Date: 2011-02-25T08:29:42Z
ABSTRACT
We analyzed the long-term outcome of patients operated for esophageal cancer and evaluated the new seventh edition of the tumor-node-metastasis classification for cancers of the esophagus.Retrospective analysis and new classification.Data of a single-center cohort of 2920 patients operated for cancers of the esophagus according to the seventh edition are presented. Statistical methods to evaluate survival and the prognostic performance of the staging systems included Kaplan-Meier analyses and time-dependent receiver-operating-characteristic-analysis.Union Internationale Contre le Cancer stage, R-status, histologic tumor type and age were identified as independent prognostic factors for cancers of the esophagus. Grade and tumor site, additional parameters in the new American Joint Cancer Committee prognostic groupings, were not significantly correlated with survival. Esophageal adenocarcinoma showed a significantly better long-term prognosis after resection than squamous cell carcinoma (P < 0.0001). The new number-dependent N-classification proved superior to the former site-dependent classification with significantly decreasing prognosis with the increasing number of lymph node metastases (P < 0.001). The new subclassification of T1 tumors also revealed significant differences in prognosis between pT1a and pT1b patients (P < 0.001). However, the multiple new Union Internationale Contre le Cancer and American Joint Cancer Committee subgroupings did not prove distinctive for survival between stages IIA and IIB, between IIIA and IIIB, and between IIIC and IV.The new seventh edition of the tumor-node-metastasis classification improved the predictive ability for cancers of the esophagus; however, stage groups could be condensed to a clinically relevant number. Differences in patient characteristics, pathogenesis, and especially survival clearly identify adenocarcinomas and squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus as 2 separate tumor entities requiring differentiated therapeutic concepts.
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