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1 From the Division of Thoracic Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston
A 57-year-old man with dysphagia was found to have a distal esophageal cancer. The tumor was staged radiographically (with endoesophageal ultrasonography) and operatively. The latter consisted of a thoracoscopic examination of the thoracic esophagus and surrounding lymph nodes, as well as a limited laparotomy to evaluate the stomach and the perigastric and celiac lymph nodes. It was determined that the patient had a high-risk lesion (locally advanced, T3-4 or N1). Induction chemotherapy with concurrent radiation therapy was administered. Following neoadjuvant treatment, the patient underwent an uneventful esophagectomy. No residual tumor was identified in the specimen. The patient was doing well 6 months following his surgery. This case demonstrates the use of staging to guide therapy in esophageal cancer.
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