Abstract
Abstract Background Our publication Across the CROSS in daily practice challenged the routine use of neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy for locally advanced esophageal adenocarcinoma, showing a comparable 5-year overall and disease-free survival after primary surgery. This current study reevaluated overall and disease-free survival on long term and aimed to differentiate recurrence patterns and its final impact on overall survival. Methods This retrospective cohort study with propensity score-matched analysis included all surgically treated patients between 2000 and 2018 with locally advanced adenocarcinoma (cT1/2N+ or cT3/4N0/+). Exclusion criteria of the CROSS trial were applied. Patients were matched on age, Charlson comorbidity score, clinical tumor length, and lymph node status. The primary end point was time to recurrence. Results 149 propensity score-matched cases were defined in each group. There was still no significant difference after 10 years in median overall survival (33.6 vs 34.9 months, p=0.52) and median disease-free survival (14.1 vs 14.0 months, p=0.13) between both groups. Furthermore, nCRT resulted in a shorter time to overall recurrence (6.3 vs 11.5 months, p=0.004) and locoregional recurrence (6.3 vs 13.6 months, p=0.005). Additionally, overall survival after diagnosis of recurrence was also significantly shorter for nCRT patients than for primary surgery patients (6.9 vs 9.6 months, p=0.032). Conclusion Our propensity score-matched results indicate that primary surgery can offer a comparable long-term overall and disease-free survival as nCRT followed by surgery. Both overall and locoregional recurrences occur earlier in nCRT patients and overall survival after recurrence is significantly longer after primary surgery.
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