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Original Article

Combined Treatment Modalities in Esophageal Cancer: Should chemotherapy be included?

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Pages 439-450 | Accepted 12 Apr 1994, Published online: 08 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

The poor prognosis of esophageal carcinoma patients after treatment with local modalities (surgery/radiotherapy) is well known. The purpose of this review is to assess the question whether addition of chemotherapy to local treatment of squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus has had any beneficial effect on treatment results. In the absence of a sufficient number of randomized trials addressing this issue, data mainly from single-arm studies are discussed. Compiled data from studies on preoperative chemotherapy, preoperative chemoradiation and chemoradiation without surgery suggest that addition of chemotherapy to local treatment (surgery/radiotherapy) might increase short-term survival (2 years) compared to local therapy alone. In the case of chemoradiation without surgery this conclusion is strengthened by results from randomized trials. In general lack of long-term follow-up data limits conclusion whether to recommend the inclusion of chemotherapy into treatment of esophageal cancer or not. Treatment results, however, from studies utilizing combination chemotherapy given concomitant with radiotherapy support the contention that well-designed randomized trials with long-term follow-up should be performed. Outside controlled trials, however, surgery or radiotherapy should still be regarded as standard treatment modalities.

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