Abstract Background Barrett’s oesophagus is a premalignant condition. Development of high-grade dysplasia (HGD) formerly was an indication for oesophagectomy, but endoscopic treatment (ET) is now recommended as first-line therapy: radiofrequency ablation (RFA) or endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR). Oesophagectomy is only considered for cases where ET was unsuccessful. Previous review of our institution’s outcomes between 2014 and 2017 showed a 54% complete EMR excision rate and 20% salvage oesophagectomy (n=25). Since then, RFA has been utilised in our institution. We aimed to review our recent data to assess current outcomes. Method Retrospective analysis was performed of patients identified via registration at the Hull University Hospital Trust oesophagogastric MDT between March 2017 and December 2023. Inclusion criteria was confirmed histology of HGD on 2 occasions by 2 specialist pathologists, 6 weeks apart. EMR was performed for focal oesophageal lesions and non-nodular segments were treated by RFA. Patients were included once they had at least one surveillance endoscopy and 6 months had passed following treatment. Patients who were either unfit for ET and managed medically (n=6), and those who were subsequently proven to have more advanced disease and treated surgically (n=4) were excluded. Results 35 patients were identified: 20 underwent EMR, 15 RFA. 55% of EMR patients had successful excision, 9 required additional RFA for residual low-grade dysplasia (LGD). 66% RFA patients had successful ablation. 3 patients required further EMR for residual LGD. Overall 82% had successful ET with no HGD on surveillance. 5 patients had persistent HGD and 1 T1b disease: 4 underwent oesophagectomy, 2 managed oncologically. Barrett’s tended towards being longer in patients where ET failed to eradicate HGD (median 6cm vs 3cm MWU p=0.07). No patient in the series died because of disease-related pathology. 1 patient developed stricture post-RFA requiring dilatation. Conclusion ET for HGD is effective with a high rate of successful treatment. It can be used as a single or dual modality. Salvage oesophagectomy rates are lower than previously reported (8% vs 20%) and complications are low (3% stricture rate). Longer segment Barrett’s may be less likely be responsive to ET, although not reaching significance in our series. ET should continue to be offered as the first-line treatment for oesophageal HGD.
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