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Early Gastrointestinal Cancers

Overview of attention for book
Cover of 'Early Gastrointestinal Cancers'

Table of Contents

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    Book Overview
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    Chapter 1 Clinically Relevant Study End Points in Rectal Cancer
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    Chapter 2 Neoadjuvant Treatment in Rectal Cancer: Do We Always Need Radiotherapy–or Can We Risk Assess Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer Better?
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    Chapter 3 Treatment Dilemmas in Patients with Synchronous Colorectal Liver Metastases
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    Chapter 4 Pancreatic Surgery: Beyond the Traditional Limits
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    Chapter 5 Early Gastrointestinal Cancers
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    Chapter 6 Radiotherapy of the Pancreas: State of the Art in 2012
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    Chapter 7 Adenocarcinoma Of the GEJ: Gastric or Oesophageal Cancer?
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    Chapter 8 Why is There a Change in Patterns of GE Cancer?
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    Chapter 9 Endoscopic treatment for esophageal squamous cell carcinoma.
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    Chapter 10 Open or Minimally Invasive Resection for Oesophageal Cancer?
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    Chapter 11 Choosing the Best Treatment for Esophageal Cancer
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    Chapter 12 Multimodal Therapy of GEJ Cancer: When is the Definitive Radiochemotherapy the Treatment of Choice?
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    Chapter 13 Radiotherapy of gastroesophageal junction cancer.
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    Chapter 14 Optimizing Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy Through the Use of Early Response Evaluation by Positron Emission Tomography
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    Chapter 15 Optimal Surgery for Gastric Cancer: Is More Always Better?
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    Chapter 16 Can Adjuvant Chemoradiotherapy Replace Extended Lymph Node Dissection in Gastric Cancer?
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    Chapter 17 Predicting the Response to Chemotherapy in Gastric Adenocarcinoma: Who Benefits from Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy?
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    Chapter 18 Prediction of Response and Prognosis by a Score Including only Pretherapeutic Parameters in 410 Neoadjuvant Treated Gastric Cancer Patients
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    Chapter 19 Adjuvant Chemotherapy: An Option for Asian Patients Only?
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    Chapter 20 Selecting the Best Treatment for an Individual Patient
Attention for Chapter 13: Radiotherapy of gastroesophageal junction cancer.
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Chapter title
Radiotherapy of gastroesophageal junction cancer.
Chapter number 13
Book title
Early Gastrointestinal Cancers
Published in
Recent results in cancer research Fortschritte der Krebsforschung Progrès dans les recherches sur le cancer, November 2012
DOI 10.1007/978-3-642-31629-6_13
Pubmed ID
Book ISBNs
978-3-64-231628-9, 978-3-64-231629-6
Authors

Sterzing F, Grenacher L, Debus J, Florian Sterzing, Lars Grenacher, Jürgen Debus, Sterzing, Florian, Grenacher, Lars, Debus, Jürgen

Abstract

Adenocarcinomas of the gastroesophageal junction (GEJ) require multimodal treatment approaches to accomplish good local control and overall survival. While early T1/2 N0 tumors are treated with surgery alone, they are only found in a small subset of patients due to the lack of symptoms at this stage. Most of the tumors are detected in locally advanced stage where surgery alone results in disappointing outcome. Chemotherapy and/or chemoirradiation in the neoadjuvant setting are used to improve conditions for oncological surgery. They aim to achieve a downsizing with a pathological complete remission in the optimal case, improve R0 rates, and upfront treat microscopic metastatic tumor cells. The optimal neoadjuvant treatment approach-chemotherapy, chemoirradiation, or a multiphase approach of both-is yet unclear. Chemoirradiation can improve local control after incomplete surgery and is an important option for patients unfit for surgery. In addition, it enables symptom relief in a palliative setting, namely dysphagia, pain, or bleeding. While target volumes are very much standardized, new technologies as image-guided intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IG-IMRT) and particle therapy have the potential to improve the therapeutic window by minimizing toxicity. Challenges of the present and the future will be the combination of radiotherapy with other cytostatic drugs and modern targeted therapies. This should ideally be integrated into a multimodal setting that is able to identify risk groups according to predictive markers and tumor response, altogether leading to a personalized oncological approach.

Mendeley readers

Mendeley readers

The data shown below were compiled from readership statistics for 14 Mendeley readers of this research output. Click here to see the associated Mendeley record.

Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Unknown 14 100%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Researcher 3 21%
Student > Master 3 21%
Student > Doctoral Student 2 14%
Student > Ph. D. Student 2 14%
Unknown 4 29%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Medicine and Dentistry 9 64%
Unknown 5 36%