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ONCOLOGY. Vol. 21 No. 5
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The Hwang Article Reviewed 

The Emerging Epidemic of Gastroesophageal Cancers: A Neglected Volcano?

By

PUTAO CEN, MD
Medical Oncology Fellow
Division of Cancer Medicine

JAFFER A. AJANI, MD
Professor
Department of Gastrointestinal Medical Oncology
The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center
Houston, Texas

| April 30, 2007

Gastroesophageal adenocarcinomas (proximal gastric and lower esophageal or gastro-esophageal junction) are rapidly on the rise in both the West[1] and the developing world. The reasons may be diverse and still somewhat elusive, but for lower esophageal and gastroesophageal junction adenocarcinoma, increasing body mass index of the Western population,[2] gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), and consequent Barrett's metaplasia may be fueling the dramatic increase in younger American men (as well as, now, a noticeable increase in women).

Relative to the 1975 rates of incidence, these cancers have far surpassed the increases seen in prostate cancer or melanoma,[1] but who is paying attention? Apparently not the agencies that can make a big difference. The incidence of esophageal cancer has increased by 40% since 1990,[2] and most new cases prove to be adenocarcinoma on histology. We are not diagnosing these cancers early, and the associated mortality has continued to increase.[1] We project that this group of diseases will continue to rise over the next 20 years—a volcano waiting to explode—and yet, we in the oncology community are not preparing ourselves to face the emerging epidemic.

In this issue of ONCOLOGY, Hwang has written a concise and balanced review of the current status of therapy for gastroesophageal cancers, drawing our attention to the seriousness of this problem globally and in the United States. His review is a welcome addition to the literature, and we appreciate this opportunity to comment on the subject. We will refrain from repeating the considerable details that Hwang has presented on many aspects of these cancers, and instead offer other comments that might be helpful to individuals interested in these diseases.

Prevention and Early Detection

There are two aspects to be considered in dealing with gastroesophageal cancers: early detection/prevention and therapy of established malignancies (localized and metastatic). In terms of prevention, nothing solid has been established for gastric cancer, apart from treating Helicobacter pylori when it is found. This measure may help only to some extent in at-risk populations. Clearly, there is nothing to lean on for the prevention of esophageal cancers.

Early detection of gastric cancer is practiced effectively in Japan and it is in early stages of development in Korea, but no strategy has been established elsewhere. Individuals suffering from GERD have a limited awareness of the need for early detection of esophageal cancer, but GERD and Barrett's metaplasia are not in the general public's vocabulary. (They should be.) Confusing and contradicting guidelines exist for surveillance of patients with Barrett's metaplasia.[3] The only thing everyone is clear about in this setting is when a patient is diagnosed with high-grade dysplasia. In the midst of all this confusion, we are left with late diagnoses of gastroesophageal cancers with nearly half of the patients having an unresectable (and, therefore, incurable) cancer.

Advanced Disease

For patients with advanced gastroesophageal cancers, the experience can be a struggle. These patients already have considerable baseline symptoms, poor tolerance to intensive therapies, deteriorating quality of life, and short survival. Few therapies have emerged. Few randomized trials have been conducted. Considerably more advances are needed. It would be important to develop therapies that prolong overall survival (beyond 12 months on a consistent basis) for patients with advanced cancer, have a favorable safety profile, and are convenient—particularly for patients but also for the medical team (ie, much less labor-intensive and cost-intensive). In addition, such treatment should maintain or improve quality of life and improve clinical benefit.

We do not believe this is a dream. With the advent of effective newer agents (for example, S-1[4] and biologic agents[5-7]), these benchmarks may be right around the corner. Future challenges will include the selection of optimum therapies and avoidance of ineffective ones, which may require considerable investigation of cancer biology and patient genetics.

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This commentary refers to the following article

Role of Chemotherapy in the Treatment of Gastroesophageal Cancers






 
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