Esophageal Cancer
Esophageal cancer is characterized by abnormal cell growth in the esophagus, the muscular tube connecting the throat to the stomach, often leading to symptoms such as difficulty swallowing, weight loss, pain when swallowing, a hoarse voice, and enlarged lymph nodes around the collarbone. Other possible symptoms include a dry cough and sometimes coughing up or vomiting blood.
Health Outcomes
- Accelerated Recovery of Chemotherapy-Induced Myelosuppression
- Improved Chemotherapy Outcome
- Improved Oral Mucositis
- Improved Pathological Response
- Improved Response to PD-1 Immunotherapy
- Improved Survival Through GI Passage
- Increased Binding of Carcinogenic Compounds
- Increased KLF4 Protein Levels
- Increased Reduced Glutathione Level
- No Improvement in Objective Cancer Treatment Response
- Reduced CEA Levels
- Reduced Cancer-Specific Mortality
- Reduced Dysphagia
- Reduced Dysphagia Severity
- Reduced Dysphagia Symptom Score
- Reduced Dysplasia
- Reduced Fumonisin B1 Levels
- Reduced Radiation-Induced Pulmonary Injury
- Reduced Time to Enteral Nutrition Transition
- Reduced Tumor Downstaging
- Reduced Tumor Grade