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Adding radiation before surgery helps some esophageal cancer patients get better surgery results and live longer

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Adding radiation before surgery helps some esophageal cancer patients get better surgery results and…
Photo by CDC / Unsplash

Doctors looked at many studies involving over 2,000 patients with esophageal cancer. These patients received either chemotherapy alone or chemotherapy combined with radiation before surgery. The goal was to see if adding radiation made surgery safer or more effective.

For patients with squamous cell cancer, adding radiation made it much more likely that doctors could remove the entire tumor. It also helped clear the cancer completely inside the tissue in many cases. This group also had fewer chances of the cancer returning near the original site.

For patients with adenocarcinoma, adding radiation helped doctors remove the tumor more often. However, it did not change the risk of leaks at the surgical connection site. Overall survival improved for the squamous cell group but stayed the same for the adenocarcinoma group.

The study followed patients for about three years. While adding radiation helped some groups, it did not help all patients in the same way. Doctors must talk with patients to decide if this extra treatment is right for their specific type of cancer.

What this means for you:
Adding radiation to chemotherapy before surgery helped remove more tumors and lower local recurrence for some esophageal cancer types.
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