|
|
||||||||
Guest Access | Sign In via User Name/Password |
|||||||||
1 From the Joint Center for Radiation Therapy, Department of Radiation Oncoogy, Harvard Medical School, Boston
Radiotherapy (RT) in conjunction with surgery may have a number of roles in the treatment of patients with potentially resectable esophageal carcinoma. The use of RT alone either preoperatively or postoperatively can be expected to improve resectability rates only modestly. The risk of locoregional failure, a common problem in esophageal carcinoma, has been substantially reduced with preoperative or postoperative RT in trials with a duration of follow-up of 3 or more years, although this effect has not been seen in trials with shorter follow-up. Because of the high risk of distant failure associated with these tumors and perhaps because of the inadequate doses used, most trials of RT have not shown notable improvements in overall survival rates. The risk of severe complications following preoperative or postoperative RT is small, provided that very high doses or fraction sizes are avoided. Concurrent chemotherapy and RT administration have been shown to be superior to RT alone in patients who have medically or surgically inoperable conditions; randomized trials using this combined modality in patients with resectable disease have only recently begun. In addition to evaluating the efficacy of this approach, investigators hope to establish the optimal sequencing and timing of administration of these modalities with regard to each other and to surgery.
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |