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Recurrence and survival after minimally invasive and open esophagectomy for esophageal cancer: a post hoc analysis of the Ensure Study.

Recurrence and survival after minimally invasive and open esophagectomy for esophageal cancer: a post hoc analysis of the Ensure Study.
Recurrence and survival after minimally invasive and open esophagectomy for esophageal cancer: a post hoc analysis of the Ensure Study.
Objective: to determine the impact of operative approach [open (OE), hybrid minimally invasive (HMIE), and total minimally invasive (TMIE) esophagectomy] on operative and oncologic outcomes for patients treated with curative intent for esophageal and junctional cancer.

Background: the optimum oncologic surgical approach to esophageal and junctional cancer is unclear.

Methods: this secondary analysis of the European multicenter ENSURE study includes patients undergoing curative-intent esophagectomy for cancer between 2009 and 2015 across 20 high-volume centers. Primary endpoints were disease-free survival (DFS) and the incidence and location of disease recurrence. Secondary endpoints included among others R0 resection rate, lymph node yield, and overall survival (OS).

Results: in total, 3199 patients were included. Of these, 55% underwent OE, 17% HMIE, and 29% TMIE. DFS was independently increased post-TMIE [hazard ratio (HR): 0.86 (95% CI: 0.76-0.98), P = 0.022] compared with OE. Multivariable regression demonstrated no difference in absolute locoregional recurrence risk according to the operative approach [HMIE vs OE, odds ratio (OR): 0.79, P = 0.257; TMIE vs OE, OR: 0.84, P = 0.243]. The probability of systemic recurrence was independently increased post-HMIE (OR: 2.07, P = 0.031), but not TMIE (OR: 0.86, P = 0.508). R0 resection rates ( P = 0.005) and nodal yield ( P < 0.001) were independently increased after TMIE, but not HMIE ( P = 0.424; P = 0.512) compared with OE. OS was independently improved following both HMIE (HR: 0.79, P = 0.009) and TMIE (HR: 0.82, P = 0.003) as compared with OE.

Conclusion: in this European multicenter study, TMIE was associated with improved surgical quality and DFS, whereas both TMIE and HMIE were associated with improved OS as compared with OE for esophageal cancer.
esophageal cancer, esophagectomy, minimally invasive surgery, recurrence, survival
0003-4932
267-273
Henckens, Sofie P.G.
46297f69-5660-4c45-bbd7-deb10501f6e3
Schuring, Nannet
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Elliott, Jessie A.
febc486f-f2d1-4872-8113-f2ac11759b7a
Johar, Asif
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Markar, Sheraz Rehan
c0870699-2183-41ea-a499-be9a90ba78ed
Gantxegi, Amaia
fc378a0a-1041-4711-a5a0-8648decfefe6
Lagergren, Pernilla
a047cdb5-b8e7-473a-ae53-6366732ed335
Hanna, George B.
ddc15faa-06d4-4984-bf51-694cad5e6699
Pera, Manuel
56c59287-312d-4cad-bdab-f0130a5b9ae3
Reynolds, John V.
1eeff08c-a3f1-4daf-b658-709ac2cba090
van Berge Henegouwen, Mark I.
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Gisbertz, Suzanne S.
495bfee6-26cb-45e7-b9f0-c1acc865102b
Underwood, Tim
8e81bf60-edd2-4b0e-8324-3068c95ea1c6
ENSURE study group
Henckens, Sofie P.G.
46297f69-5660-4c45-bbd7-deb10501f6e3
Schuring, Nannet
154210a6-f033-44ed-9fad-7bb54d1299c1
Elliott, Jessie A.
febc486f-f2d1-4872-8113-f2ac11759b7a
Johar, Asif
66d213f4-e391-4813-8816-fea00527376d
Markar, Sheraz Rehan
c0870699-2183-41ea-a499-be9a90ba78ed
Gantxegi, Amaia
fc378a0a-1041-4711-a5a0-8648decfefe6
Lagergren, Pernilla
a047cdb5-b8e7-473a-ae53-6366732ed335
Hanna, George B.
ddc15faa-06d4-4984-bf51-694cad5e6699
Pera, Manuel
56c59287-312d-4cad-bdab-f0130a5b9ae3
Reynolds, John V.
1eeff08c-a3f1-4daf-b658-709ac2cba090
van Berge Henegouwen, Mark I.
960e3828-43db-4bc0-a872-bac75232bcb1
Gisbertz, Suzanne S.
495bfee6-26cb-45e7-b9f0-c1acc865102b
Underwood, Tim
8e81bf60-edd2-4b0e-8324-3068c95ea1c6

Henckens, Sofie P.G., Schuring, Nannet, Elliott, Jessie A., Johar, Asif, Markar, Sheraz Rehan, Gantxegi, Amaia, Lagergren, Pernilla, Hanna, George B., Pera, Manuel, Reynolds, John V., van Berge Henegouwen, Mark I. and Gisbertz, Suzanne S. , ENSURE study group (2024) Recurrence and survival after minimally invasive and open esophagectomy for esophageal cancer: a post hoc analysis of the Ensure Study. Annals of Surgery, 280 (2), 267-273. (doi:10.1097/sla.0000000000006280).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: to determine the impact of operative approach [open (OE), hybrid minimally invasive (HMIE), and total minimally invasive (TMIE) esophagectomy] on operative and oncologic outcomes for patients treated with curative intent for esophageal and junctional cancer.

Background: the optimum oncologic surgical approach to esophageal and junctional cancer is unclear.

Methods: this secondary analysis of the European multicenter ENSURE study includes patients undergoing curative-intent esophagectomy for cancer between 2009 and 2015 across 20 high-volume centers. Primary endpoints were disease-free survival (DFS) and the incidence and location of disease recurrence. Secondary endpoints included among others R0 resection rate, lymph node yield, and overall survival (OS).

Results: in total, 3199 patients were included. Of these, 55% underwent OE, 17% HMIE, and 29% TMIE. DFS was independently increased post-TMIE [hazard ratio (HR): 0.86 (95% CI: 0.76-0.98), P = 0.022] compared with OE. Multivariable regression demonstrated no difference in absolute locoregional recurrence risk according to the operative approach [HMIE vs OE, odds ratio (OR): 0.79, P = 0.257; TMIE vs OE, OR: 0.84, P = 0.243]. The probability of systemic recurrence was independently increased post-HMIE (OR: 2.07, P = 0.031), but not TMIE (OR: 0.86, P = 0.508). R0 resection rates ( P = 0.005) and nodal yield ( P < 0.001) were independently increased after TMIE, but not HMIE ( P = 0.424; P = 0.512) compared with OE. OS was independently improved following both HMIE (HR: 0.79, P = 0.009) and TMIE (HR: 0.82, P = 0.003) as compared with OE.

Conclusion: in this European multicenter study, TMIE was associated with improved surgical quality and DFS, whereas both TMIE and HMIE were associated with improved OS as compared with OE for esophageal cancer.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 5 April 2024
Published date: August 2024
Keywords: esophageal cancer, esophagectomy, minimally invasive surgery, recurrence, survival

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 493242
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493242
ISSN: 0003-4932
PURE UUID: 7f4aa4e0-7498-4777-af4d-d8e32b3d8ba8
ORCID for Tim Underwood: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9455-2188

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Date deposited: 28 Aug 2024 17:12
Last modified: 29 Aug 2024 01:38

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Contributors

Author: Sofie P.G. Henckens
Author: Nannet Schuring
Author: Jessie A. Elliott
Author: Asif Johar
Author: Sheraz Rehan Markar
Author: Amaia Gantxegi
Author: Pernilla Lagergren
Author: George B. Hanna
Author: Manuel Pera
Author: John V. Reynolds
Author: Mark I. van Berge Henegouwen
Author: Suzanne S. Gisbertz
Author: Tim Underwood ORCID iD
Corporate Author: ENSURE study group

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