Surgical treatment of cancer of the cardia and the esophagus

1990 
: During the period 1977 to 1989, 379 patients with cancer cardiac and cancer esophagi were admitted. The ages ranged from 18-88 years with an average of 65 years. The treatment concept was basically unchanged during the study period. Resection as described by Ivor Lewis was employed as palliative or curative treatment when resection was considered possible. Intubation of the esophagus was employed when no other treatment was considered possible. Resection was employed in 251 patients, eight of these emergencies on account of perforation or haemorrhage. Bypass operations were employed in five patients, intubations in 63 and no surgical treatment was undertaken in 60 patients. The all over operative mortality for resections was 11.2% and for elective operations 9.9%. The operative mortality increased with the TNM stage of the tumour and was 3.2% for stages I + II, 8.2% for stage III and 24.4% for stage IV. The complication ration was 42%. 15% of the patients submitted to resection required reoperation. Anastomotic leaks were encountered in 18 patients and nine of these died. Pulmonary complications were the most frequent and resulted in ten early postoperative deaths. The mortality connected with intubations was 15%. The over all five-year survival rate after resections was 10.4%. In stages I + II this was 42% and 8% in stage III. None of the patients in stage IV survived for two years. The longest survival after intubation was less than one year.
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