“…There are several treatment methods for ESOS, including surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy ( 2 – 4 , 10 , 11 ), surgical resection is dominated, 85 to 98% ( 10 , 11 ), even all patients with localized disease were managed with surgical resection of the primary tumor ( 4 ), radical resections are effective for local control and have the best chance of cure for ESOS ( 8 ), 5-year OS and 5-year disease-free survival (DFS) was 51.4 and 43% respectively ( 10 ), but the proportion of patients treated alone with surgery was low (21.8%) ( 10 ), and its effect on distant metastasis is not so clear, multiagent chemotherapy may be help to reduce distant metastasis, a trend towards increased length of survival was found in patients who received chemotherapy compared to those who did not (16.4 months vs. 9.3 months) ( 2 ), the gemcitabine-docetaxel chemotherapy regimen was considered as well-tolerated and induced a long lasting partial response for ~14 months in the treatment of ESOS ( 17 ). Higher survival was observed in patients who received perioperative chemotherapy with a trend in favour of multiagent osteosarcoma-type regimen which included doxorubicin, ifosfamide and cisplatin ( 10 ), and postoperative adjuvant external beam radiotherapy being considered to improve local control rate and preserve organ function ( 18 , 19 ), and especially the patients who with tumour >5 cm and R0 margins seems to benefit more from RT ( 10 ), and there is a tendency to extend 5-y DFS in patients who underwent postoperative adjuvant RT compared with surgery alone (66 vs. 42%, P=0.38) ( 11 ), though RT was not associated with a lower disease-related mortality rate or a longer event-free survival ( 4 ). However, the available data are contradictory with regard to the use of chemotherapy and radiotherapy regimens in the management of ESOS, radiographic response rates and pathologic complete response rates to doxorubicin-based systemic therapy are low ( 3 ), no significant association of disease-specific or event-free survival was found with the addition of radiation, chemotherapy, or both to surgery, radiation and chemotherapeutic treatment were not associated with a lower incidence of death due to disease or a longer event-free survival ( 4 ).…”