Chemoradiation therapy is effective for the palliative treatment of malignant dysphagia.

Between 1993 and 2001, 106 patients with esophageal cancer were reviewed at a multidisciplinary clinic and treated with palliative intent by chemoradiation therapy. This study assesses the palliative benefit on dysphagia and documents the toxicity of this treatment. The study population comprised 72 men and 34 women with a median age of 69 years. Patients were treated with a median radiation dose of 35 Gy in 15 fractions with a concurrent single course of 5 FU-based chemotherapy. Dysphagia was measured at the beginning and completion of treatment and at monthly intervals until death, using a modified DeMeester (4-point) score. Treatment was well tolerated, with only 5% of patients failing to complete therapy. The treatment-related mortality was 6%. The median survival for the study population was 7 months. The median baseline score at presentation was 2 (difficulty with soft food). Following treatment, 49% of patients were assessed as having a dysphagia score of 0 (no dysphagia). Seventy-eight per cent had an improvement of at least one grade in their dysphagia score after treatment. Only 14% of patients showed no improvement with treatment. Fifty-one per cent maintained improved swallowing until the time of last follow-up or death. This single-institution study shows that chemoradiation therapy administered for the palliation of malignant dysphagia is well tolerated and produces a sustainable normalization in swallowing for almost half of all patients.

[1]  D. Girling Surgical resection with or without preoperative chemotherapy in oesophageal cancer: a randomised controlled trial , 2002, The Lancet.

[2]  N. Marcon,et al.  A prospective, randomized, controlled trial of covered expandable metal stents in the palliation of malignant esophageal obstruction at the gastroesophageal junction , 2001, American Journal of Gastroenterology.

[3]  M. Iannettoni,et al.  Randomized trial of preoperative chemoradiation versus surgery alone in patients with locoregional esophageal carcinoma. , 2001, Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

[4]  Y. Youssef,et al.  A prospective trial of short-course radiotherapy plus chemotherapy for palliation of dysphagia from advanced esophageal cancer. , 2000, Radiotherapy and oncology : journal of the European Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology.

[5]  J. Lau,et al.  Self-expandable metal stents for malignant dysphagia. , 1999, The Australian and New Zealand journal of surgery.

[6]  D. Nicholson Tracheal and oesophageal stenting for carcinoma of the upper oesophagus invading the tracheo-bronchial tree. , 1998, Clinical radiology.

[7]  M. Clague,et al.  Cost‐effectiveness in the management of patients with oesophageal cancer , 1998, The British journal of surgery.

[8]  E. Stange,et al.  Treatment of unresectable carcinoma of the esophagus or the gastroesophageal junction by mesh stents with or without radiochemotherapy. , 1998, International journal of oncology.

[9]  K. Tranberg,et al.  Malignant dysphagia: palliation with esophageal stents--long-term results in 100 patients. , 1998, Radiology.

[10]  J. Bosset,et al.  Chemoradiotherapy followed by surgery compared with surgery alone in squamous-cell cancer of the esophagus. , 1997, The New England journal of medicine.

[11]  T. Walsh,et al.  A comparison of multimodal therapy and surgery for esophageal adenocarcinoma. , 1996, The New England journal of medicine.

[12]  P. Devitt,et al.  Combined modality therapy for esophageal carcinoma: preliminary results from a large Australasian multicenter study. , 1995, International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics.

[13]  P. Siersema,et al.  Palliation of Malignant Dysphagia from Oesophageal Cancer , 1998 .