Riedel M, Stein H J, Mounyam L, Zimmermann F, Fink U, Siewert J R
Chirurgische Klinik und Poliklinik, Klinik für Strahlentherapie, and Pneumologie der I. Medizinischen Klinik und Poliklinik, Klinikum rechts der Isar, Technische Universität, München, Germany.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2000 Nov;162(5):1741-6. doi: 10.1164/ajrccm.162.5.2003115.
To assess the bronchoscopic and lung function changes induced by preoperative radiochemotherapy (30 Gy radiation and 5-fluorouracil) in patients with proximal esophageal cancer, we prospectively compared the findings in 77 consecutive patients before and after the therapy. All patients completed the radiochemotherapy protocol; toxicity was minimal. Sixty-four patients underwent surgery, 48 had total gross removal of disease, and six had a complete histologic response. Of the 13 patients who developed apparent direct macroscopic signs of tumor invasion into the airways during therapy, histologic proof of cancer was obtained in only one of the abnormalities. Bronchoscopy was falsely negative in six patients in whom airway invasion of the cancer was found at surgery. Neoadjuvant therapy led to no systematic changes in the appearance of the uninvolved tracheal mucosa; microscopically, an increase in postinflammatory changes, hyperplasia, and metaplasia was found. There was no significant change in the values of lung function parameters after the therapy. No patient developed symptoms suggestive of radiation-induced lung changes, although in one of them, subtle radiologic features consistent with radiation pneumonitis were found. No patient died of postoperative pulmonary complications. The interpretation of bronchoscopy in the assessment of airway invasion of esophageal cancer after radiochemotherapy is more difficult than at baseline staging; the positive predictive value of macroscopic abnormalities without microscopic proof of cancer is low, and even with extensive sampling for histology and cytology, the procedure was falsely negative in 9.4%. Neoadjuvant therapy did not induce radiation pneumonitis or changes in lung function that could be of concern at the following operation.