Endoscopy International Open (Mar 2018)

Clinicopathological examination of ESD as salvage therapy for esophageal cancer after definitive chemo-radiation therapy

  • Tomo Kagawa,
  • Shigenao Ishikawa,
  • Tomoki Inaba,
  • Mariko Colvin,
  • Junki Toyosawa,
  • Yuki Aoyama,
  • Masaya Ishida,
  • Sakiko Kuraoka,
  • Kunio Okamoto,
  • Ichiro Sakakihara,
  • Koichi Izumikawa,
  • Kumiko Yamamoto,
  • Sakuma Takahashi,
  • Shigetomi Tanaka,
  • Mihoko Matsuura,
  • Toshimi Hasui,
  • Masaki Wato,
  • Midori Ando,
  • Satoko Nakamura,
  • Koichi Mizobuchi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0044-102296
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 06, no. 04
pp. E450 – E461

Abstract

Read online

Background and study aims Salvage therapy for esophageal cancer following chemo-radiation therapy (CRT) has not been established. We aimed to evaluate endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) as a salvage therapy based on histopathological features of lesions. Patients and methods We compared 10 lesions in eight patients with local residual, recurrent, or metachronous esophageal squamous cell carcinoma treated by ESD after CRT (CRT group) and 59 lesions treated by ESD without CRT (non-CRT group) during the same period. Results The en bloc resection rate was 100 % while the complete resection rate was 80.0 % in the lesions after CRT, indicating no difference between the CRT and non-CRT groups. Pathological examination showed that fibrosis was more intense in the lamina propria mucosa, muscularis mucosa, and submucosa. The muscularis mucosa was thicker in both non-tumor and tumor sites in the CRT group compared to the non-CRT group. However, severe submucosal fibrosis was observed only in one lesion in the CRT group. The maximum diameter of the submucosal artery was significantly larger in the CRT group (P < 0.001). Conclusions Compared to the non-CRT group, the lesions in the CRT group were accompanied by fibrosis while the muscularis mucosa were thicker; however, severe fibrosis of the submucosa was rare. It is important to dissect the muscularis mucosa appropriately during ESD, which makes successful dissection of the submucosa possible. Attention should be paid to bleeding from large arteries.