Abstract

We herein report two cases of thoracic esophageal cancer operated on by mediastinoscopy-assisted esophagectomy (MAE) via the neck and the esophageal hiatus after right thoracotomy for primary lung cancer. Case 1 was a 78-year-old man who had undergone a lower lobectomy of the right lung 5 years earlier and had also undergone a pleuroparietopexy for postoperative chylothorax via right thoracotomy again. A squamous cell carcinoma of the middle thoracic esophagus was detected by endoscopy. Although radiotherapy was performed on the patient, the esophageal tumor was locally recurrent. Thus, MAE was performed because it would have been difficult to approach the esophageal tumor by right thoracotomy again, and the patient was successfully treated. Case 2 was a 71-year-old-man who had undergone an upper lobectomy of the right lung 5 years earlier. For a squamous cell carcinoma located between the middle and lower esophagus, MAE was performed. Metastatic lymph nodes surrounding the middle and lower thoracic esophagus were sufficiently dissected. Although esophageal cancer patients with metachronous lung cancer are rare, therapeutic issues for these patients remain. MAE via the neck and the esophageal hiatus for esophageal cancer patients who had previously undergone a lobectomy of the right lung may be considered a tool for surgical approach. Furthermore, MAE may be considered to be a salvage operation such as in case 1.

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