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Locally advanced esophageal cancer – multidisciplinar management – personal experience

Publication at First Faculty of Medicine |
2012

Abstract

Esophageal cancer is characterized by 90 % mortality. Nevertheless, the part of the patients suffering from locally advanced disease can survive for a long time thanks to the multidisciplinar treatment.

This fact can be documenetd by this case report of 40 year old man with squamous cell carcinoma of medial oesophagus intergrowing to respiratory tract, stage T4N1M0. At the start of the treatment Dumon Y stent was introduced into airways to avoid suffocation.

Then, the concurrent chemoradiotherapy was used, with the radiation dose of 66Gy/33 fractions/47 days. Chemotherapy using combinationof cisplatin and fluorouracil was administered in the total length of 6 cycles, with the radiation applied during the second and third cycle.

After the treatment, CT revealed the partial regression of the tumor, while endoscopic biopsies from oesophagus and bronchial tubes being negative for malignancy. During the first year after the chemoradiotherapy the tight stenosis of the oesophagus with the total aphagia was to be solved using the repeated dilatations.

During the following period, the illness course was complicated by endobronchial granulations, treated by the local laser treatment and mechanical ablation, as well. Repeated biopsies shown the local endobronchial progression of the tumor, so that the paliative chemotherapy with the docetaxel was applicated, lasting one-year.

During this period, repeated endobronchial biopsies did not proved a malignancy, CT finding was normalized and the patient´s status was improved. Finally, the Y stent was removed 25 months after insertion, and the chemotherapy was ended.

Three years after the diagnosis, the patient had no signs of the tumor recurrence.