Comparative Study
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Thoracoscopic and laparoscopic staging for esophageal cancer.

Accurate pretreatment staging for patients with esophageal cancer (EC) is becoming increasingly important in the evaluation and comparison of different treatment modalities. Noninvasive staging methods are imperfect in detecting lymph node metastasis in patients with EC. Surgical staging with the thoracoscopic/laparoscopic (Ts/Ls) technique may provide accurate staging information that is useful for evaluating and comparing the results of clinical trials of preoperative chemotherapy and radiotherapy. It can be used to confirm or exclude suspicious distant metastasis found by other staging methods. Pretreatment (lymph node) biopsies obtained by Ts/Ls staging allow further molecular biologic analysis to detect occult lymph node metastasis for more accurate lymph node staging. Since 1992, we have used Ts/Ls staging for EC in 111 patients. We found that Ts/Ls is a promising method for staging lymph nodes in EC patients. A recent study showed that pretreatment surgical lymph node staging can predict response and survival for EC patients receiving trimodality treatment (ie, radiation, chemotherapy, and surgery). The information obtained with surgical staging now offers us the opportunity to optimize therapy to specific patient groups based on the extent of disease at the time of initial presentation. Nevertheless, unlike the practice of mediastinoscopy in lung cancer patients, Ts/Ls staging in EC patients remains an academic interest rather than a clinical practice. The concept of accurate pretreatment staging of EC remains to be realized and accepted in the clinical community.

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