Neoadjuvant treatment in esophageal cancer-established treatments and new developments reviewed

Bianca Mostert*, Ate Van der Gaast

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articleAcademic

1 Citation (Scopus)
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Abstract

As the majority of patients experiences locoregional relapse and/or distant metastasis even after radical resection of esophageal cancer, many efforts have been made and are ongoing to identify the optimal multimodality treatment strategy. The true benefit and harm of neoadjuvant therapy including chemotherapy, radiotherapy or the combination, is still difficult to interpret given the heterogeneity in patient and tumor characteristics. Nonetheless, neoadjuvant chemoradiation with weekly carboplatin and paclitaxel (the CROSS regimen) is considered standard of care for squamous cell carcinoma in Europe. Definitive chemoradiation is considered an equal alternative in the United States. For adenocarcinoma, preoperative chemoradiation with a platinum and 5FU or the CROSS regimen and peri-operative chemotherapy with a platinum and 5FU or the FLOT (fluorouracil, leukovorin, oxaliplatin and docetaxel) regimen are all options. New developments in systemic anti-tumor therapy will most likely involve dual anti-HER2 inhibition or novel anti-HER2 antibody-drug conjugates for adenocarcinoma. Immunotherapy monotherapy in an unselected patient population does not seem to be as effective in esophageal cancer as it is in other cancer types. However, when we can correctly identify the subset of patients which does benefit from this treatment by employing new predictive markers, or find an effective synergistic combination of immunotherapy with chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy, immunotherapy could still improve patient outcome in the future.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberA141
JournalAnnals of Esophagus
Volume3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2021

Bibliographical note

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© 2021 Korean Journal of Remote Sensing. All rights reserved.

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