Abstract

The standard treatment for locoregionally advanced unresectable esophageal squamous cell carcinoma was radical chemoradiotherapy. However, the prognosis was modest. Emerging evidence showed the concept of induction chemotherapy with a goal of conversion surgery. We reviewed the long-term, clinical outcomes and safety data of induction chemotherapy using docetaxel-cisplatin-5FU (DCF) and subsequent definitive treatment, either surgery or radical chemoradiotherapy (CRT), in locally advanced unresectable esophageal cancer in Queen Mary Hospital, Hong Kong. A total of 47 patients (median age 62 years, male: 41 (87.2%)) with locoregionally advanced unresectable esophageal cancer received induction DCF. The response rate was 65.9% (complete/partial response: n = 31). After induction DCF, 24 patients (41.4%) had radical surgery and 7 (14.9%) had definitive CRT. The median overall survival (mOS) was significantly longer in patients received subsequent surgery compared with those with definitive CRT (mOS: 40.2 vs. 9.1 months, hazard ratio 3.33, 95% confidence interval 1.22-9.07, p = 0.02) and no definitive treatment (mOS: 40.2 vs. 6.3 months, hazard ratio 8.51, 95% confidence interval 3.7-19.73, p < 0.001). Patients who received surgery, female, and those with supraclavicular lymph node involvement had a better OS. Twenty-one patients (44.7%) developed grade 3/4 adverse events during induction DCF, and two died after chemotherapy because of trachea-esophageal fistula complicated with sepsis. Eleven patients who had surgery had postoperative complications and none had postoperative mortality. Induction DCF and subsequent conversion surgery offered a chance of cure with long-term survival benefit and manageable toxicities in patients with locoregionally advanced unresectable esophageal cancer.

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