Long-Term Outcomes of Carbon Dioxide Insufflation in Thoracoscopic Esophagectomy After Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy for Esophageal Squamous Cell Carcinoma: A Retrospective Cohort Study
Koji Otsuka, Satoru Goto, Tomotake Ariyoshi, Takeshi Yamashita, Akira Saito, Masahiro Kohmoto, Rei Kato, Kentaro Motegi, Nobuyuki Yajima, Masahiko Murakami

TL;DR
This study examines whether using carbon dioxide during thoracoscopic esophagectomy affects long-term survival in patients with esophageal cancer.
Contribution
The study provides evidence that CO2 insufflation does not compromise long-term survival outcomes in thoracoscopic esophagectomy.
Findings
No significant differences in five-year overall survival were found between CO2 insufflation and non-insufflation groups.
Short-term outcomes like operation time and blood loss were significantly better with CO2 insufflation.
Long-term cancer recurrence risk did not appear to affect prognosis in CO2 insufflation cases.
Abstract
Background: Thoracoscopic esophagectomy (TE) with carbon dioxide (CO2) insufflation is increasingly performed for esophageal cancer; however, there is limited evidence of the long-term outcomes of CO2 insufflation on postoperative survival. Objectives: We investigated the long-term outcomes of TE with or without CO2 insufflation. Methods: We enrolled 182 patients who underwent TE for esophageal cancer between January 2003 and October 2013 and categorized them into two groups: with and without CO2 insufflation. The primary endpoint was five-year overall survival (5y-OS). Secondary endpoints included long-term outcomes, such as five-year relapse-free survival (5y-RFS) and five-year cancer-specific survival (5y-CSS), and short-term outcomes, such as surgical and non-surgical complications and reoperation within 30 days. Results: Follow-up until death or the five-year postoperative…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEsophageal Cancer Research and Treatment · Lung Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment · Esophageal and GI Pathology
