Minimally Invasive Endoscopic Therapy May Be as Effective as Surgery for Esophageal Cancer

A minimally invasive endoscopic procedure may be as effective as esophagectomy for early stage, superficial esophageal cancer, according to new research from the Mayo Clinic in Florida.

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The endoscopic therapy showed similar long-term survival rates as those for the procedure that takes out and rebuilds the esophagus.

Researchers looked at 1,619 patients with early-stage adenocarcinoma from 1998 to 2009, of which 19 percent had endoscopic therapy and 81 percent had surgery. They found similar survival rates, as well as a 3 percent increase in the use of endoscopic therapy, especially in older patients.

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