Clinical Trials Update in Resectable Esophageal Cancer.
Management of resectable esophageal cancer has evolved into a multidisciplinary paradigm centered on multimodality therapy.
APA
Dinerman AJ, Carr SR (2026). Clinical Trials Update in Resectable Esophageal Cancer.. Cancers, 18(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers18020300
MLA
Dinerman AJ, et al.. "Clinical Trials Update in Resectable Esophageal Cancer.." Cancers, vol. 18, no. 2, 2026.
PMID
41595220
Abstract
Management of resectable esophageal cancer has evolved into a multidisciplinary paradigm centered on multimodality therapy. Historically, induction chemoradiotherapy followed by surgery, as established by the CROSS trial, became the standard of care for locally advanced disease due to improvements in R0 resection rates and overall survival. More recently, the ESOPEC trial reexamined this paradigm in esophageal adenocarcinoma, demonstrating superior survival and improved systemic disease control with perioperative chemotherapy using the FLOT regimen compared with chemoradiotherapy. In parallel, the MATTERHORN trial further advanced perioperative treatment by showing improved event-free survival with the addition of the immune checkpoint inhibitor durvalumab to FLOT chemotherapy. Alongside these systemic therapy advances, surgical management has transitioned toward minimally invasive and robotic-assisted esophagectomy, offering equivalent oncologic outcomes with reduced perioperative morbidity. This review summarizes the evolving evidence from pivotal clinical trials, highlights ongoing studies integrating immunotherapy, and discusses emerging strategies such as adoptive cell transfer which currently is under investigation for metastatic recurrence, but in the future may provide additional treatment options for resectable esophageal cancer.