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In a patient with a mid-esophageal squamous cell carcinoma with tracheal invasion confirmed on bronchoscopy, would you treat with definitive chemo-radiation with curative intent?

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Radiation Oncology · The Tisch Cancer Institute

I generally start with chemotherapy alone in these patients, usually carbo/taxol for 2-3 months, and then re-evaluate with PET, bronchoscopy, and endoscopy to determine if there is still evidence of transmural invasion into the trachea. Often, if the tumor responds, the tracheal invasion is no longe...

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Radiation Oncology · University of Nebraska Medical Center

Curative-intent chemoradiation can be technically challenging for a mid-esophageal squamous cell carcinoma with tracheal invasion due to the risk of creating or worsening a tracheoesophageal fistula during treatment. Whether I would treat a patient with a mid-esophageal squamous cell carcinoma with ...

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Radiation Oncology · Quillen VA Medical Center

This is a palliative case. Symptoms not revealed. Stents offer patency of respective tubes and can be applied when symptoms warrant. At MUSC, we randomized such patients to palliative XRT, vs Nytenol metallic stent. Final data held by Boston Scientific; never published. Stent provided the ability to...

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Medical Oncology · Mary Lanning Healthcare Morrison Cancer Center/University of Nebraska Medical Center Adjunct Faculty

For locally advanced squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus preoperative chemoradiation followed by surgery, or definitive chemoradiation with close surveillance and salvage surgery for local tumor persistence or progression can be considered (Obermannová et al., PMID 35914638). Definitive chemora...

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Radiation Oncology · University of Florida

Yes, depending on comorbidities.

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