• Ann. Surg. Oncol. · Dec 2017

    Outcome with Primary En-bloc Esophagectomy for Submucosal Esophageal Adenocarcinoma.

    • Katrin Schwameis, Kyle M Green, Stephanie G Worrell, Jamil Samaan, Shannon Cooper, Sergei Tatishchev, Daniel S Oh, Jeffrey A Hagen, and Steven R DeMeester.
    • Department of Thoracic Surgery, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California (USC), Los Angeles, CA, USA.
    • Ann. Surg. Oncol. 2017 Dec 1; 24 (13): 3921-3925.

    BackgroundIntramucosal esophageal adenocarcinoma can be reliably treated endoscopically. Controversy exists about the use of endotherapy versus esophagectomy for submucosal tumors. Increasingly endotherapy is considered for submucosal tumors in part because of the presumed high mortality with esophagectomy and the perceived poor prognosis in patients with nodal disease. This study was designed to assess survival following primary en bloc esophagectomy (EBE) in patients with submucosal esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC).MethodsThis is a retrospective review of all patients who underwent EBE for submucosal EAC between 1998 and 2015. No patient had neoadjuvant therapy.ResultsThere were 32 patients (28M/4F; median age 64 years). The median tumor size was 1.5 cm (0.4-8.0), and the median number of resected nodes was 48 (23-85). There was one perioperative death. Lymph node metastases were present in 7 patients (22%). There was one involved node in four patients and 2, 3, and 31 nodes in one patient each. The one N3 patient received adjuvant therapy. The median follow-up was 87 months. Overall survival at 5 and 10 years was 84 and 70% respectively. Disease-specific survival at 10 years was 90%. Eight patients died, but only three deaths (9%) were related to EAC. Disease-specific survival at 10 years in node-positive patients was 71%.ConclusionsSurvival after primary en bloc esophagectomy for submucosal adenocarcinoma was excellent even in node-positive patients. Mortality with esophagectomy was low and far less than the 22% risk of node metastases in patients with submucosal tumor invasion. Esophagectomy should remain the preferred treatment for T1b esophageal adenocarcinoma.

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