Cancers (Oct 2021)

The Prognostic Impact of Histology in Esophageal and Esophago-Gastric Junction Adenocarcinoma

  • Roberto Fiocca,
  • Luca Mastracci,
  • Marialuisa Lugaresi,
  • Federica Grillo,
  • Antonietta D’Errico,
  • Deborah Malvi,
  • Paola Spaggiari,
  • Anna Tomezzoli,
  • Luca Albarello,
  • Ari Ristimäki,
  • Luca Bottiglieri,
  • Elena Bonora,
  • Kausilia K. Krishnadath,
  • Gian Domenico Raulli,
  • Riccardo Rosati,
  • Uberto Fumagalli Romario,
  • Giovanni De Manzoni,
  • Jari Räsänen,
  • Sandro Mattioli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13205211
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 20
p. 5211

Abstract

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Stage significantly affects survival of esophageal and esophago-gastric junction adenocarcinomas (EA/EGJAs), however, limited evidence for the prognostic role of histologic subtypes is available. The aim of the study was to describe a morphologic approach to EA/EGJAs and assess its discriminating prognostic power. Histologic slides from 299 neoadjuvant treatment-naïve EA/EGJAs, resected in five European Centers, were retrospectively reviewed. Morphologic features were re-assessed and correlated with survival. In glandular adenocarcinomas (240/299 cases—80%), WHO grade and tumors with a poorly differentiated component ≥6% were the most discriminant factors for survival (both p lower risk group, comprising glandular well-differentiated (34.4%) and rare variants, such as mucinous muconodular carcinoma (2.7%) and diffuse desmoplastic carcinoma (1.7%), versus the higher risk group, comprising the glandular poorly differentiated subtype (45.8%), including invasive mucinous carcinoma (5.7%), diffuse anaplastic carcinoma (3%), mixed carcinoma (6.7%) (CSS p p = 0.001). Stage (p p = 0.001), age >72 years (p = 0.008), and vascular invasion (p = 0.015) were prognostically significant in the multivariate analysis. The combined evaluation of stage/histologic group identified 5-year cancer-specific survival ranging from 87.6% (stage II, lower risk) to 14% (stage IVA, higher risk). Detailed characterization of histologic subtypes contributes to EA/EGJA prognostic prediction.

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