Esophageal tumor length is
independently associated with long-term survival
Yendamuri. Cancer 2009;115:508
Esophageal cancer staging uses tumor depth as the sole criterion for
assessment of the primary tumor (pT). To the authors' knowledge the
impact of esophageal tumor length on long-term outcome and the
esophageal cancer staging system has not been fully evaluated in the
current era.
All esophageal cancer patients (n = 209) undergoing surgery from
1995 to 2005 who did not receive preoperative chemotherapy or
radiotherapy were reviewed. Maximum esophageal tumor length along a
craniocaudal axis was determined pathologically after surgical
resection. Univariate and multivariate analyses were used to assess
the impact of esophageal tumor length ( 3
cm vs >3 cm) on long-term survival.
Esophageal tumor length was closely associated with long-term
survival 5-year survival:
3
cm = 68%, >3 cm = 10%. Multivariate Cox regression analyses
demonstrated tumor length was found to be a significant
independent predictor of long-term survival even when controlled for
sex, age, tumor location, histology, margin positivity, surgical
procedure, and current pTNM criteria. The incorporation of tumor
length in pTNM staging significantly improves the ability to predict
the long-term survival of patients
(5-year survival for
patients with tumors
3
cm and stages I, IIA, IIB, and III disease = 86%, 62%, 49%, and 22%,
respectively; survival for patients with tumors measuring >3 cm and
stages I, IIA, IIB, and III disease = 27%, 22%, 0%, and 8%.
CONCLUSIONS:Esophageal tumor length is an independent predictor of
long-term survival in the current era and should be considered for
incorporation into the current esophageal cancer staging system to
better predict long-term survival and identify high-risk patients
for postoperative therapy. |