Abstract

Here we report on a 54-year-old man who had undergone left pneumonectomy for a primary lung cancer 25 years earlier and who underwent salvage blunt esophagectomy for a recurrent esophageal cancer after definitive chemoradiotherapy. The patient received chemoradiotherapy for a cancer in the upper thoracic esophagus at the clinical stage IA (T1bN0M0) because of a past history of left pneumonectomy for lung cancer, and the esophageal cancer showed complete response. At 1 year after chemoradiotherapy, local recurrence was found in the upper thoracic esophagus. Although chemotherapy using docetaxel was administered, this was not effective. Transhiatal esophagectomy as salvage surgery was successfully done by a combination of laparo-mediastinoscopy assisted blunt dissection with the eversion stripping method. The postoperative course was uneventful. The patient died of lung and brain metastasis at 23 months after the salvage surgery. Transhiatal esophagectomy may be an option as a salvage esophagectomy in cases with a history of major lung surgery.

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