Background: There is currently no consensus on the role, method or frequency of surveillance following curative treatment of oesophageal cancer; re-investigation largely relying on symptom triggers which may delay detection of recurrence and impact survival. We hypothesised that intensive surveillance with endoscopy and imaging was more likely to detect recurrent or new cancer at a curable stage and this study examined the outcomes of this surveillance policy.
Patients and methods: A prospective database of curatively treated oesophageal carcinoma patients was interrogated for patients with new or recurrent disease detected on surveillance and amenable to salvage surgery. Surveillance was by clinic visits and endoscopy/biopsy 3-monthly to 3 years, 6-montjhly to 5 years and yearly thereafter while computerised tomography (CT) was performed 6-monthly for the first 3 years, annually to 5 years, and subsequently as indicated.
Results: Of 205 patients treated with curative intent, 24 (11.7 %) underwent salvage surgery for 27 incidences of new or recurrent cancer. The median and 5-year survival was 51.8 months and 45.8 %, which was not inferior to the entire cohort of patients treated for cure, which was 30.2 months and 32.6 % respectively (p = 0.498).
Conclusions: Intensive surveillance identified almost 12 % of patients with recurrent or second primary cancer amenable to salvage surgery, with a non-inferior outcome to the remaining cohort. Further studies will refine surveillance intervals, techniques and follow-up duration for oesophageal cancer as for other GI malignancies.
Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Ltd.