Cancers (Oct 2021)

Compound Endoscopic Morphological Features for Identifying Non-Pedunculated Lesions ≥20 mm with Intramucosal Neoplasia

  • João Pedro da Costa-Seixas,
  • María López-Cerón,
  • Anna Arnau,
  • Òria Rosiñol,
  • Miriam Cuatrecasas,
  • Alberto Herreros-de-Tejada,
  • Ángel Ferrández,
  • Miquel Serra-Burriel,
  • Óscar Nogales,
  • Luisa de Castro,
  • Jorge López-Vicente,
  • Pablo Vega,
  • Marco A. Álvarez-González,
  • Jesús M. González-Santiago,
  • Marta Hernández-Conde,
  • Pilar Diez-Redondo,
  • Liseth Rivero-Sánchez,
  • Antonio Z. Gimeno-García,
  • Aurora Burgos,
  • Francisco Javier García-Alonso,
  • Marco Bustamante-Balén,
  • Eva Martínez-Bauer,
  • Beatriz Peñas,
  • Daniel Rodríguez-Alcalde,
  • Maria Pellisé,
  • Ignasi Puig

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13215302
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 21
p. 5302

Abstract

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Background: The major limitation of piecemeal endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR) is the inaccurate histological assessment of the resected specimen, especially in cases of submucosal invasion. Objective: To classify non-pedunculated lesions ≥20 mm based on endoscopic morphological features, in order to identify those that present intramucosal neoplasia (includes low-grade neoplasia and high-grade neoplasia) and are suitable for piecemeal EMR. Design: A post-hoc analysis from an observational prospective multicentre study conducted by 58 endoscopists at 17 academic and community hospitals was performed. Unbiased conditional inference trees (CTREE) were fitted to analyse the association between intramucosal neoplasia and the lesions’ endoscopic characteristics. Result: 542 lesions from 517 patients were included in the analysis. Intramucosal neoplasia was present in 484 of 542 (89.3%) lesions. A conditional inference tree including all lesions’ characteristics assessed with white light imaging and narrow-band imaging (NBI) found that ulceration, pseudodepressed type and sessile morphology changed the accuracy for predicting intramucosal neoplasia. In ulcerated lesions, the probability of intramucosal neoplasia was 25% (95%CI: 8.3–52.6%; p p p p < 0.001). Conclusion: Non-ulcerated LST-G type and LST-NG flat elevated lesions are the most common non-pedunculated lesions ≥20 mm and are associated with a high probability of intramucosal neoplasia. This means that they are good candidates for piecemeal EMR. In the remaining lesions, further diagnostic techniques like magnification or diagnostic +/− therapeutic endoscopic submucosal dissection should be considered.

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