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citations
Cited by 411 publications
(303 citation statements)
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References 19 publications
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“…We avoided esophagectomy in patients with cervical involvement requiring a pharyngo-laryngectomy and in poor condition patients where the risk of post-surgical mortality is higher. In fact, the overall peri-operative death (6%) and the peri-operative complication (23%) rates were similar to those reported with surgery alone [5,39] and did not seem to be increased by this preoperative treatment.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
“…We avoided esophagectomy in patients with cervical involvement requiring a pharyngo-laryngectomy and in poor condition patients where the risk of post-surgical mortality is higher. In fact, the overall peri-operative death (6%) and the peri-operative complication (23%) rates were similar to those reported with surgery alone [5,39] and did not seem to be increased by this preoperative treatment.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
“…Oesophagectomy is an exemplar model of complex major surgery; there is no common elective oncological resection that carries the same operative risks, with a 10 and 14% in-hospital mortality rate reported from recent North American and UK series, respectively (Bailey et al, 2003;Enzinger and Mayer, 2003;McCulloch et al, 2003). After the period of post-operative hospitalisation, a further 20 -40% of patients treated with curative intent die within 1 year (Enzinger and Mayer, 2003).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The rate of postoperative complications is inversely proportional to the distance of the incision to the diaphragm [17] but varies depending on the surgical intervention. The rate is very high in esophageal surgery, and it was found to be 3.24 times higher in those operated on due to malignant tumor [18,19]. The type of incision, as well as the type of surgery, is important in predicting the development of POPCs.…”
Section: ) Site and Type Of Surgerymentioning
confidence: 99%