University of Bristol: Surgery Incision Type Doesn’t Affect Patient Recovery from Oesophageal Cancer, Study Finds
New research has found no evidence of a difference between recovery time and complications when comparing standard and keyhole surgical incisions for the treatment of oesophageal cancer (cancer of the gullet). The study, led by the University of Bristol Medical School and published in the British Journal of Surgery, showed surgeons treating patients with oesophageal cancer do not need to change their practice if they have a strong preference for either procedure type.
Oesophageal cancer is the tenth most common cancer globally. It causes one in 18 cancer-related deaths. If only the oesophagus and local lymph nodes are affected surgeons usually perform a procedure called an oesophagectomy. This means they remove the oesophagus to try and cure the cancer. The two most common ways of doing this use either standard incisions (two large cuts) or ‘keyhole’ incisions (one large cut and several small ones).
The ROMIO study was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR). It involved patients being randomly assigned to two groups. One of the groups had standard surgery (263 people) and the other had keyhole surgery (264 people).
Researchers found no differences between the groups in relation to:
- recovery three months after surgery, as measured by patient completed questionnaires about physical function
- how often patients developed complications and how severe the complications were
- the extent to which the cancer was removed (it was equally well removed in both groups)
Chris Metcalfe, Professor of Medical Statistics at Bristol Medical School: Population Health Sciences (PHS), said: “Our study didn’t confirm findings from previous trials, which suggested that minimally invasive approaches to oesophagectomy reduced the number of complications patients would develop.
“We found no evidence of differences between standard and keyhole approaches in relation to short-term clinical outcomes or patient reported recovery of physical function over three months. There was no strong evidence that the costs of NHS resources in the first three months differed between the two approaches to the procedure.
“We will report about the longer-term recovery (24-month follow-up) and health of ROMIO participants in a separate publication. We will also publish the findings from a nested study on totally keyhole surgery.”
Jane Blazeby, Professor of Surgery in the Bristol Medical School: PHS, added: “These results show us that recovery after this type of major surgery is not influenced by the type of incision used by surgeons, despite prior beliefs that the keyhole approach is better than standard incisions.
“Future research is now needed to carefully evaluate robotic surgical techniques for oesophageal cancer surgery.”