Securing the Achilles' Heel of Esophagectomy: An Updated Evidence-Based Roadmap for Anastomotic Leak Prevention. Journal Abstract - Guideline Central

Securing the Achilles' Heel of Esophagectomy: An Updated Evidence-Based Roadmap for Anastomotic Leak Prevention.

Published: 2026 Apr 19

Authors

, , , , ,

Abstract

: Esophagectomy remains the definitive curative treatment for esophageal cancer but is historically burdened by significant procedure-related morbidity. Anastomotic leakage (AL) is still the "Achilles' heel" of esophageal surgery, serving as a primary benchmark for surgical quality due to its profound impact on patient recovery, healthcare costs, and long-term oncological outcomes. While surgical expertise and perioperative care have matured, reported AL rates remain persistently high. This necessitates a shift in focus from purely technical modifications toward integrated, data-driven preventive strategies. : Five years after our initial review, this update synthesizes the rapid evolution in AL prevention. We evaluate the transition from empirical surgical pragmatism to evidence-based protocols, integrating recent breakthroughs in real-time perfusion monitoring, prophylactic endoluminal technologies, and multidisciplinary patient optimization. This work provides a contemporary "roadmap" for navigating the complexities of esophageal reconstruction. : The prevention of AL has evolved into a multimodal "bundle" that begins well before the index operation. This review highlights the critical shift toward quantitative perfusion assessment via indocyanine green fluorescence angiography, which is increasingly replacing subjective visual inspection as the standard for anastomotic site selection. We discuss the emerging role of gastric ischemic preconditioning as a biological strategy to enhance conduit vascularity, alongside the paradigm of proactive management using preemptive endoluminal vacuum therapy to mitigate septic sequelae in high-risk cases. Furthermore, we examine technical refinements in conduit construction and conditioning-focusing on the 'tension-perfusion' relationship-and the essential role of structured prehabilitation within enhanced recovery after surgery frameworks. While the quality of evidence remains heterogeneous, the move toward standardized reporting and objective monitoring marks a new era of precision in esophageal surgery.

Keywords: RAMIE, anastomotic leakage, esophagectomy, gastric conduit, indocyanine green (ICG), preemptive endoluminal vacuum therapy (pEVT), prehabilitation, sarcopenia

Source

Cancers

Publication Type

Journal Article

Language

English

PubMed ID

42073617

You rely on Guideline Central for transparency

Guideline Central and select third party use “cookies” on this website to enhance the user experience.

This technology helps us gather statistical and analytical information to optimize the relevant content for you.

The user also has the option to opt-out which may have an effect on the browsing experience.