Abstract

BackgroundEndoscopic approaches are gradually considered as a reliable treatment of intramucosal esophageal squamous carcinoma. However, endoscopic resection (ER) is limited by the potential lymph node metastasis (LNM) at various depths of mucosal and submucosal invasion.MethodsWe conducted a retrospective review of 498 patients with pT1 superficial esophageal squamous carcinoma (SESC) who underwent surgical resection from January 2008 to August 2015. Pathological characteristics of tumors including location, size, appearance, differentiation, invasion depth, and nodal status were reviewed, and risk factors were analyzed.ResultsLNM was found in 0.0, 2.7, 6.3, 18.2, 15.9, and 34.3 % of the m1, m2, m3, sm1, sm2, and sm3 lesions, respectively. Univariate logistic regression identified the presence of the tumor size > 2 cm (p < 0.05), the presence of the poor tumor differentiation (p < 0.05), and the depth of tumor invasion (p < 0.05) and angiolymphatic invasion (p < 0.05) to be the important risk factors associated with the prevalence of tumor-positive lymph nodes. These findings were confirmed in multivariate logistic regression as independent predictors for LNM.ConclusionsER is considered as a reliable treatment of m1 to m2 lesions. Radical surgical resection (SR) is the standard and irreplaceable therapy of sm1 to sm3 lesions. Patients with m3 lesions should undergo ER as the initial procedure for diagnosis. And this treatment is supported only by a successful description of the tumor’s characteristics, including (1) only muscularis mucosa invasion and without invasion of the resection margins and (2) without any risk predictors for LNM. Otherwise, SR is recommended.

Highlights

  • Endoscopic approaches are gradually considered as a reliable treatment of intramucosal esophageal squamous carcinoma

  • For patients with superficial esophageal squamous carcinoma (SESC), EUS T staging and chest multi-slice computed tomography (MSCT) are highly recommended as preoperative routines (PETCT is optional) to evaluate any metastasis

  • When node metastasis to mediastinum can be ruled out, we propose that endoscopic resection (ER) be considered as a reliable treatment for m1 to m2 lesions and surgical resection (SR) be the standard and irreplaceable therapy for sm2 to sm3 lesions

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Summary

Introduction

Endoscopic approaches are gradually considered as a reliable treatment of intramucosal esophageal squamous carcinoma. Endoscopic resection (ER) is limited by the potential lymph node metastasis (LNM) at various depths of mucosal and submucosal invasion. With the recent progress in endoscopic techniques, the incidence of superficial esophageal squamous carcinoma (SESC) is increasing. Patients with SESC may expect a more favorable prognosis compared with those who have advanced esophageal squamous carcinoma. The accurate prediction of lymph node involvement in different subsets of SESC would give the patient a favorable opportunity to receive more reasonable treatment. The aim of this study was (1) to clarify the relationship between clinicopathological risk factors and LNM and (2) to identify the best candidate patients for ER treatment

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