Oesophagus

Date

2014

Authors

Knight, B.
Jamieson, G.

Editors

Wichmann, M.
Maddern, G.

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Book chapter

Citation

Palliative surgery, 2014 / Wichmann, M., Maddern, G. (ed./s), Ch.10, pp.125-144

Statement of Responsibility

Benjamin C. Knight and Glyn G. Jamieson

Conference Name

Abstract

Oesophageal cancer frequently presents late and with incurable disease; therefore, knowledge and experience in palliative techniques are essential. Clinical policy on palliative surgery is generally determined by the local cancer network with individualised treatment agreed at a multidisciplinary meeting. Despite advances in perioperative care and meticulous patient selection, oesophagectomy remains a morbid procedure, and today palliative oesophagectomy is rarely performed, if at all. The most troublesome symptoms of incurable oesophageal cancer, namely, dysphagia and bleeding, can now be successfully alleviated using less invasive methods. Oesophageal self-expanding stents, brachytherapy, external beam radiotherapy and endoscopic recannulation techniques are highly effective as unimodal or multimodal therapy and are well tolerated by patients with minimal side effects. As such, they form the backbone of modern palliative oesophageal surgery.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2014

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record