| Literature DB >> 33045799 |
Chan Hyuk Park1, Dong-Hoon Yang2, Jong Wook Kim3, Jie-Hyun Kim4, Ji Hyun Kim5, Yang Won Min6, Si Hyung Lee7, Jung Ho Bae8, Hyunsoo Chung9, Kee Don Choi2, Jun Chul Park10, Hyuk Lee6, Min-Seob Kwak11, Bun Kim12, Hyun Jung Lee9, Hye Seung Lee13, Miyoung Choi14, Dong-Ah Park14, Jong Yeul Lee15, Jeong-Sik Byeon2, Chan Guk Park16, Joo Young Cho17, Soo Teik Lee18, Hoon Jai Chun19.
Abstract
Although surgery was the standard treatment for early gastrointestinal cancers, endoscopic resection is now a standard treatment for early gastrointestinal cancers without regional lymph node metastasis. High-definition white light endoscopy, chromoendoscopy, and image-enhanced endoscopy such as narrow band imaging are performed to assess the edge and depth of early gastrointestinal cancers for delineation of resection boundaries and prediction of the possibility of lymph node metastasis before the decision of endoscopic resection. Endoscopic mucosal resection and/or endoscopic submucosal dissection can be performed to remove early gastrointestinal cancers completely by en bloc fashion. Histopathological evaluation should be carefully made to investigate the presence of risk factors for lymph node metastasis such as depth of cancer invasion and lymphovascular invasion. Additional treatment such as radical surgery with regional lymphadenectomy should be considered if the endoscopically resected specimen shows risk factors for lymph node metastasis. This is the first Korean clinical practice guideline for endoscopic resection of early gastrointestinal cancer. This guideline was developed by using mainly de novo methods and encompasses endoscopic management of superficial esophageal squamous cell carcinoma, early gastric cancer, and early colorectal cancer. This guideline will be revised as new data on early gastrointestinal cancer are collected.Entities:
Keywords: Early colorectal cancer; Early gastric cancer; Endoscopic resection; Guideline; Superficial esophageal squamous cell carcinoma
Year: 2020 PMID: 33045799 PMCID: PMC8100377 DOI: 10.5217/ir.2020.00020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intest Res ISSN: 1598-9100
Definition of Terms Related to Endoscopic Resection
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Resection of a tumor in one piece without visible residual tumor | |
| Complete resection | Resection of a tumor without histological evidence of tumor cell involvement on the lateral and vertical resection margins |
| Curative resection | Resection of an early gastrointestinal cancer, which is considered curative based on complete resection and minimal to no risk of lymph node metastasis |
| The criteria for curative resection are different according to the type of cancers (early esophageal, gastric and colorectal cancers) |
Summary and Strength of Recommendations for SESCC
| Statement E1: | We recommend endoscopic resection for SESCC without distant or lymph node metastasis, excluding those with obvious submucosal invasion (Grade of recommendation: strong, Level of evidence: moderate). |
| Statement E2: | We recommend Lugol chromoendoscopy and/or image-enhanced endoscopy to define the extent of lesion before endoscopic treatment of SESCC (Grade of recommendation: strong, Level of evidence: moderate). |
| Statement E3: | We recommend endoscopic ultrasound to define the stage of SESCC before endoscopic treatment (Grade of recommendation: strong, Level of evidence: moderate). |
| Statement E4: | We suggest magnifying endoscopy with narrow band imaging for SESCC to assess the depth of invasion before endoscopic treatment (Grade of recommendation: weak, Level of evidence: low). |
| Statement E5: | We recommend endoscopic submucosal dissection rather than endoscopic mucosal resection for |
| Statement E6: | We recommend oral steroid or local steroid injection therapy for patients who develop mucosal defects in > 75% of the esophageal circumference after endoscopic submucosal dissection to prevent esophageal stricture (Grade of recommendation: strong, Level of evidence: moderate). |
| Statement E7: | No additional treatment is recommended after |
SESCC, superficial esophageal squamous cell carcinoma.
Summary and Strength of Recommendations for Early Gastric Cancer
| Statement G1: | We recommend chromoendoscopy/image-enhanced endoscopy to determine the extent of lesion before endoscopic treatment of early gastric cancer (Grade of recommendation: strong, Level of evidence: moderate). |
| Statement G2: | Endoscopic ultrasonography before endoscopic resection of early gastric cancer may be helpful in determining the depth of invasion in some patients with early gastric cancer (Grade of recommendation: weak, Level of evidence: moderate). |
| Statement G3: | We recommend endoscopic resection for early gastric cancer of well or moderately differentiated tubular or papillary adenocarcinoma meeting endoscopically estimated tumor size ≤ 2 cm and endoscopically suspected mucosal cancer without ulcer (Grade of recommendation: strong, Level of evidence: moderate). |
| Statement G4: | We suggest endoscopic resection for early gastric cancer of well or moderately differentiated tubular or papillary adenocarcinoma meeting the following endoscopic findings: 1) mucosal cancer > 2 cm without ulcer, or 2) mucosal cancer ≤ 3 cm with ulcer (Grade of recommendation: weak, Level of evidence: moderate). |
| Statement G5: | We suggest endoscopic resection for poorly differentiated tubular adenocarcinoma, poorly cohesive carcinoma, and signet ring cell carcinoma meeting the following endoscopic findings: endoscopically estimated tumor size ≤ 2 cm, endoscopically mucosal cancer, and no ulcer in the tumor (Grade of recommendation: weak, Level of evidence: low). |
| Statement G6: | We recommend prophylactic hemostasis of visible vessels on the post-resection ulcer caused by endoscopic resection of early gastric cancer to lower the risk of delayed bleeding (Grade of recommendation: strong, Level of evidence: low). |
| Statement G7: | We recommend proton pump inhibitors to decrease the risk of symptoms and complications associated with iatrogenic ulcers caused by endoscopic resection of early gastric cancer (Grade of recommendation: strong, Level of evidence: high). |
| Statement G8: | We recommend endoscopic closure as the first treatment option for perforation that occurred during endoscopic resection of early gastric cancer (Grade of recommendation: strong, Level of evidence: low). |
| Statement G9: | We recommend surgical gastrectomy if histopathological evaluation after endoscopic resection of early gastric cancer meets the criteria for non-curative resection. An exception applies if cancer invasion is observed at the horizontal resection margin only (Grade of recommendation: strong, Level of evidence: moderate). |
| Statement G10: | We recommend additional endoscopic management rather than surgical gastrectomy if histopathological evaluation of endoscopically resected early gastric cancer specimen shows positive involvement at the horizontal resection margin without any other findings compatible with non-curative resection (Grade of recommendation: strong, Level of evidence: moderate). |
| Statement G11: | We recommend |
| Statement G12: | We recommend regular surveillance endoscopy every 6–12 months for patients who have had curative endoscopic resection of early gastric cancer based on absolute or expanded criteria for early detection of metachronous gastric cancer (Grade of recommendation: strong, Level of evidence: low). |
| Statement G13: | We suggest regular abdominopelvic computed tomography scan of 6- and 12-month interval for detection of extra-gastric recurrence after curative endoscopic resection of early gastric cancer based on absolute and expanded criteria (Grade of recommendation: weak, Level of evidence: low). |
Summary and Strength of Recommendations for Early Colorectal Cancer
| Statement C1: | Poor histologic types (poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma, signet ring cell carcinoma, and mucinous carcinoma), deep submucosal invasion, lymphovascular invasion, and intermediate-to-high-grade tumor budding at the site of deepest invasion are risk factors of lymph node metastasis in early colorectal cancer (Grade of recommendation: strong, Level of evidence: moderate). |
| Statement C2: | Endoscopic resection of submucosal colorectal cancer with a high risk of lymph node metastasis has a higher recurrence rate than surgical resection. Therefore, we recommend additional surgery if histological signs after endoscopic resection suggest a high risk of lymph node metastasis (Grade of recommendation: strong, Level of evidence: high). |
| Statement C3: | We recommend endoscopic assessment of pit patterns and vascular patterns to estimate the depth of submucosal invasion before endoscopic resection of early colorectal cancer (Grade of recommendation: strong, Level of evidence: high). |
| Statement C4: |
Kudo’s Pit Pattern for the Endoscopic Diagnosis of Colorectal Neoplasia [238]
| Pit pattern classification | Type I | Type II | Type IIIS | Type IIIL | Type IV | Type Vi | Type VN |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Description | Round (normal) pits | Asteroid pits | Tubular or round pits, smaller than the normal pits | Tubular or round pits, larger than normal pits | Branched or gyrus-like pits | Irregular arrangement and sizes of type IIIS, IIIL, IV pit patterns | Amorphous or non-structural pit patterns |
| Most likely histology | Normal | Hyperplastic polyp | Adenoma | Adenoma | Adenoma | Intramucosal cancer | Deep submucosal cancer |
| Sessile serrated lesion | Intramucosal carcinoma | Intramucosal carcinoma | Superficial submucosal cancer |
JNET Classification for the Endoscopic Diagnosis of Colorectal Neoplasia [246]
| JNET classification | JNET 1 | JNET 2A | JNET 2B | JNET 3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vessel pattern | Invisible | Regular caliber | Variable caliber | Loosevesselareas |
| Regular distribution (meshed or spiral pattern) | Irregular distribution | Interruption of thick vessels | ||
| Surface pattern | Regular dark or white spots | Regular (tubular/branched/papillary) | Irregular or obscure | Amorphous area |
| Similar to surrounding normal mucosa | ||||
| Most likely histology | Hyperplastic polyp | Low-grade intramucosal neoplasia | High-grade intramucosal neoplasia | Deep submucosal invasive cancer |
| Sessile serrated lesion | Superficial submucosal invasive cancer |
JNET, Japan narrow band imaging (NBI) Expert Team.