| Literature DB >> 22701199 |
Atul Bhardwaj1, Thomas J McGarrity, Douglas B Stairs, Haresh Mani.
Abstract
The incidence of esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC) has increased exponentially in the last 3 decades. Barrett's esophagus (BE) is the only known precursor of EAC. Patients with BE have a greater than 40 folds higher risk of EAC compared with the general population. Recent years have witnessed a revolution in the clinical and molecular research related to BE. However, several aspects of this condition remain controversial. Data regarding the true prevalence of BE have varied widely. Recent studies have suggested a lower incidence of EAC in nondysplastic BE (NDBE) than previously reported. There is paucity of prospective data showing a survival benefit of screening or surveillance for BE. Furthermore, the ever-increasing emphasis on healthcare cost containment has called for reexamination of the screening and surveillance strategies for BE. There is a need for identification of reliable clinical predictors or molecular biomarkers to risk-stratify patients who might benefit the most from screening or surveillance for BE. Finally, new therapies have emerged for the management of dysplastic BE. In this paper, we highlight the key areas of controversy and uncertainty surrounding BE. The paper discusses, in detail, the current literature about the molecular pathogenesis, biomarkers, histopathological diagnosis, and management strategies for BE.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22701199 PMCID: PMC3369502 DOI: 10.1155/2012/814146
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patholog Res Int ISSN: 2042-003X
Definition of Barrett's esophagus proposed by major professional organizations of various countries [8, 9, 21, 42].
| ACG(USA) | AGA(USA) | BSG(England) | SFED(France) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Endoscopic documentation of columnar lined mucosa in the tubular esophagus required | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| IM required on biopsies from the tubular esophagus | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
ACG: American College of Gastroenterology; AGA: American Gastroenterological Association; BSG: British Society of Gastroenterology; SFED: French Society of Digestive Endoscopy.
Figure 1(a) Schematic representation of the Prague criteria for endoscopically suspected esophageal columnar metaplasia/Barrett's esophagus, Step 1: recognize the presence of hiatal hernia; Step 2: identify GEJ and record depth of scope insertion; Step 3: recognize suspected BE mucosa above the GEJ; Step 4: record the depth of scope insertion at the most proximal circumferential extent of BE; Step 5: record the depth of scope insertion at maximum extent of BE; Step 6: subtract the depth of insertion for circumferential and maximum extents from the depth of scope insertion at the GEJ to calculate C and M, respectively. *Endoscopically suspected columnar mucosa. Adapted from [16]. (b) endoscopic image of Barrett's esophagus for circumferential (C) and maximum (M) extent of columnar mucosa, corresponding to the schematic representation shown in Figure 1(a), (c) another endoscopic image of BE using narrow-band imaging (NBI). NBI is a high-resolution endoscopic tool that enhances mucosal surface details without the need for special dyes (electronic chromoendoscopy).
Figure 2(a) Intestinal metaplasia is defined by the presence of goblet cells distended with mucin. In this photomicrograph there is no dysplasia, as evidenced by presence of surface maturation. Surface epithelial cells show uniform mucin caps and well-polarized nuclei. (b) Low-grade dysplasia of the intestinal type is characterized by hyperchromatic elongate nuclei that are seen in both the crypts and the surface epithelium (i.e., loss of surface maturation). (c) Presence of glandular crowding, nuclear stratification, and loss of nuclear polarity signifies high-grade dysplasia. (d) Glandular complexity, budding, and presence of incomplete glandular profiles are evidence of lamina propria invasion (intramucosal carcinoma).
Incidence of neoplastic progression of low-grade dysplasia*.
| Study (reference) | Number of BE patients followed | Duration of followup | Incidence of EAC/HGD |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bhat et al. [ | 8522 with BE, (no IM required) | 7 years (mean) | 1.4% per year (EAC) |
| Hvid-Jensen et al. [ | 11,028 with BE | 5.2 years (median) | 0.5% per year (EAC) |
| Sharma et al. [ | 618 with BE; LGD diagnosed in 156 during f/u | 2546 patient years (mean 4.12 years) | 0.6% per year (EAC) |
| Lim et al. [ | 357 with BE; LGD diagnosed in 34 during f/u | 8 years | 9/34 cases of HGD/EAC; 3.3% per year |
| Schouten et al. [ | 12,0852 with BE | 5.7 years (median) | 0.41% per year (EAC) |
| Curvers et al. [ | 147 LGD patients, but only 15% of these had a consensus diagnosis of LGD | 51.1 months (mean) | 13.4% per year in those with a consensus diagnosis of LGD |
*Includes some of the important studies, not intended to include all studies published in the literature; f/u: followup; LGD: low-grade dysplasia; HGD: high-grade dysplasia; EAC: esophageal adenocarcinoma.
Incidence of esophageal adenocarcinoma in high-grade dysplasia*.
| Study (reference) | Number of patients with HGD | Duration of followup | Incidence of EAC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Schnell et al. [ | 75 HGD patients who didn't have EAC after 1 year f/u | 7.3 years (mean) | 12/75 (16%) during 7 years; 2.19% per year |
| Weston et al. [ | 15 patients with unifocal HGD | 36.8 ± 23.2 months (mean) | 4/15 (26.7%) during f/u; ~8.7% per year |
| Rastogi et al. [ | 236 HGD patients (meta-analysis of 4 studies) | 1241 patient years | Crude = 5.57% per year; weighted = 6.58% per year |
*Includes some of the important studies, not intended to include all studies published in the literature; f/u: followup; HGD: high-grade dysplasia; EAC: esophageal adenocarcinoma.
Guidelines for screening for Barrett's esophagus by major professional organization [8, 9, 21, 42, 50].
| ACG (USA) | AGA (USA) | ASGE (USA) | BSG (England) | SFED (France) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Screening of general population | No | No | No | No | No |
| Screening of certain high-risk groups | Individualized* | Individualized* | Yes† | No | No |
ACG: American College of Gastroenterology; AGA: American Gastroenterological Association; BSG: British Society of Gastroenterology; SFED: French Society of Digestive Endoscopy.
*After careful discussion of the potential risks, benefits, and limitations of screening with the patient.
†Initial screening appropriate in select patients, no further screening needed if initial EGD is normal (see text).
Guidelines for Barrett's esophagus surveillance by major professional organizations in the United States.
| Grade of dysplasia | ACG | AGA | ASGE¥ |
|---|---|---|---|
| NDBE | 2 EGD within 1st year, then every 3 years if still NDBE | 2 EGD within 1st year, then every 3–5 years if still NDBE | 2 EGD within 1st year, then every 3 years if still NDBE |
| LGD† | Repeat EGD within 6 months; if no higher-grade dysplasia, then every 1 year | Repeat EGD within 6 months; if no higher-grade dysplasia, then every 6–12 months | Repeat EGD in 6 months; if no higher-grade dysplasia, then every 1 year |
| HGD† | Repeat EGD within 3 months to rule out EAC, then every 3 months | Repeat EGD within 3 months to rule out EAC, then every 3 months | Repeat EGD within 3 months to rule out EAC, then every 3 months |
†Should be confirmed by an expert GI pathologist.
Detailed discussion should be initiated regarding therapeutic options.
¥Jumbo biopsy forceps should be used to increase yield.
ACG: American College of Gastroenterology; AGA: American Gastroenterological Association; NDBE: nondysplastic Barrett's esophagus; LGD: low-grade dysplasia; HGD: high-grade dysplasia.