| Literature DB >> 27603347 |
Chaoqun Han1, Rong Lin, Huiying Shi, Jun Liu, Wei Qian, Zhen Ding, Xiaohua Hou.
Abstract
Endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS) is used for preoperative assessment of gastric cancer. However, recent studies suggested that EUS staging accuracy is lower than previously thought. We aimed to assess EUS efficacy and image characteristics in preoperative gastric cancer T staging.A retrospective review of clinical and imaging features of 232 gastric carcinoma patients who underwent preoperative EUS assessment of T stage was performed. Only cases with tumor-free resection margin status and no metastases were enrolled. Comparisons of preoperative EUS and postoperative histopathological stagings were also performed to identify vital EUS image features for evaluating gastric carcinoma.EUS accuracy for T staging was 64.2% (149/232) with the highest accuracy for T3 (75.0%). Enlarged lymph nodes, well differentiated histological type and Borrmann IV type were associated with diagnostic accuracy in predicting tumor invasion. Although no factors were associated with overstaging, circumferential lesions ≥1/2, signet ring cell adenocarcinoma, and Borrmann IV type had significantly higher risks of understaging. Gastric wall outer edge irregularity was also an indicator of serosal involvement with a sensitivity of 82.0%. The pancreas and colon were more frequent disease extension sites than previously predicted.Although EUS is likely the best and most accurate option that we have used to stage gastric cancer, the finding that factors including circumferential lesions, signet ring cell adenocarcinoma, and Borrmann IV type carcinoma were more frequently related to incorrect staging warrants attention.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27603347 PMCID: PMC5023869 DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000004580
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicine (Baltimore) ISSN: 0025-7974 Impact factor: 1.889
Basic tumor characteristics and pathological stage of 232 gastric cancer patients.
EUS and histopathologic results for T staging in 232 gastric cancer patients.
EUS T staging accuracy according to clinicopathologic and endoscopic variables.
Multivariate analysis of clinicopathologic factors affecting EUS T staging.
Figure 1Correct diagnosis of T staging in a patient with well differentiated gastric cancer. (A) Endoscopic image of the gastric cancer showing an ulcer located in the anterior wall of the antrum; (B) EUS image of the lesion showing a 13-mm thick hypoechoic lesion spreading from the mucosal to muscularis propria layers with an intact serosa layer (dotted line). Surgical resection confirmed well differentiated gastric cancer infiltrated to the muscularis propria layer.
Figure 2Incorrect diagnosis of T staging in a case of poorly differentiated and partial signet ring cell gastric cancer. (A) Endoscopic image of the lesion showing an ulcer lesion located in the gastric antrum; (B) EUS image of the lesion showing a 17-mm thick hypoechoic lesion that spreads throughout the entire wall and invades the serosa invasion (dotted line). The corresponding surgical specimen confirmed poorly differentiated and partial signet ring cell gastric cancer confined to the submucosal layer.
Factors affecting EUS over- or understaging.