4.6 Article

Clinico-pathologic determinants of non-e-curative outcome following en-bloc endoscopic submucosal dissection in patients with early gastric neoplasia

Journal

BMC CANCER
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12885-020-07762-9

Keywords

Early gastric cancer; ESD; Clinico-pathologic factors; Non-e-curative resection

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81700012, 81600015]

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Tumors located in the upper two third of the stomach, having a larger size (>2cm), poor histo-differentiation, and a gross type of 0-IIa/0-IIc or their mixed variants with predominant 0-IIa/0-IIc were significantly associated with a risk of NEC after ESD procedure.
BackgroundEndoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) is gaining enormous popularity in the treatment of early gastric cancers (EGCs) in many institutions across the world. However, appropriate selection of candidates for endoscopic resection is crucial to sufficiently mitigate non-e-curative (NEC) resection. This study aims at identifying the various clinico-pathologic factors that independently predict the NEC outcome and depth of submucosal invasion following ESD procedure in patients with EGC.MethodsMultiple logistic regression analysis was applied to investigate factors that independently predict both non-curability phenomenon and the level of submucosal invasion in patients with early gastric neoplasia. Statistical Packages for the Social Sciences version 23 was used for analysis.ResultsA total of 153 patients (162 EGC lesions) underwent en-bloc ESD after which the rate of complete resection and non-e-curative outcome were 95% and 22.2%, correspondingly. Multivariate analysis depicted that tumor location in the upper two third of stomach (odds ratio [OR], 5.46; 95% confidence interval [95% CI], 1.65-18.12; p = 0.006), tumor size >2cm (OR, 7.63; 95% CI, 2.29-25.42; p = 0.001), histologically undifferentiated tumor (OR, 15.54; 95% CI, 1.65-146.22; p = 0.001), and tumors with 0-IIa/0-IIc or their mixed variants with predominant 0-IIa/0-IIc (OR, 9.77; 95% CI, 1.23-77.65; p = 0.031) were all independent predictors of NEC resection for early gastric tumors. Additionally, location in the upper two third of the stomach (OR, 8.88; 95% CI, 2.90-27.17; p <0.001), ulcerated lesions (OR, 3.70; 95% CI, 1.15-11.90; p = 0.028), lesions with >2cm (OR, 2.94; 95% CI, 1.08-8.02; p = 0.036) and those with poor differentiation (OR, 6.51; 95% CI, 2.23-18.98; p = 0.001) were found to have significant association with submucosal invasion.ConclusionsTumors located in the upper two third of the stomach having a larger size (>2cm), poor histo-differentiation and a gross type of 0-IIa/0-IIc or their mixed variants with predominant 0-IIa/0-IIc were significantly associated with a risk of NEC after ESD procedure. Thus, early gastric tumors displaying these features need to be handled carefully during endoscopic resection. Our findings may shed light on the pre-procedural detection of clinicopathologic factors that determine non-e-curability in patients with EGC.

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