Background: Histopathological tumor regression grade is applied not to lymph nodes but primary tumors modified by preoperative treatments. This study focused on patients whose pathological examination at the time of surgery showed no residual tumor after chemo(radio)therapy in the primary lesion (ypT0) or lymph nodes (ypN0).
Patients and methods: A total of 87 patients with clinical stage II/III thoracic esophageal cancer underwent esophagectomy following preoperative treatments to evaluate significances between pathological response and clinical outcomes; 51 patients with clinically definitive lymph node metastasis (cN+) were analyzed as a subgroup.
Results: ypT0 rates were 20.7% and 23.5%, and ypN0 rates were 47.1% and 27.5% in the whole cohort and in the cN+ subgroup, respectively. Disease-free survival, from surgery to relapse or death, was significantly influenced by ypN status (p=0.035) but not by ypT status in the 51 patients with definitive cN+ disease. Preoperative chemoradiation was an independent favorable factor for achievement of ypN0 in the 51 patients (odds ratio=0.09; p=0.007).
Conclusion: ypN status was a predictive factor for DFS in patients treated with docetaxel plus low-dose 5-fluorouracil and cisplatin combined chemotherapy, superior to ypT status, especially in patients with definitive cN+ disease.
Keywords: Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma; chemotherapy; no residual tumor; prognostic factor.
Copyright © 2022 International Institute of Anticancer Research (Dr. George J. Delinasios), All rights reserved.