4.6 Article

Endoscopic screening for esophageal squamous-cell carcinoma in high-risk patients: a prospective study conducted in 62 french endoscopy centers

Journal

ENDOSCOPY
Volume 38, Issue 7, Pages 690-695

Publisher

GEORG THIEME VERLAG KG
DOI: 10.1055/s-2006-925255

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Background and Study Aims: The prevalence of esophageal squamous-cell carcinoma in high-risk patients and the advantages of systematic Lugol staining during esophagoscopy have not yet been evaluated in a large prospective study. in this study we aimed to assess the prevalence of this type of tumor in high-risk patients, to examine the role of Lugol staining in endoscopic screening for esophageal squamous-cell carcinoma, and to establish whether it is possible to identify a particularly high-risk group which would benefit from systematic screening. Patients and Methods: A prospective study was undertaken in 62 endoscopy centers. A total of 1095 patients were enrolled, none of whom had any esophageal symptoms. These patients had presented with either a past history of or a recent head and neck or tracheobronchial squamous-cell carcinoma (group 1), with alcoholic chronic pancreatitis (group 2), with alcoholic cirrhosis (group 3), or were alcohol and tobacco addicts (group 4). The patients underwent a meticulous endoscopic examination of the esophagus, followed by Lugol staining. Results: The prevalence of esophageal squamous-cell carcinoma was 3.2%. The group 1 patients showed the highest prevalence of carcinoma (5.3%) and the highest prevalence of dysplasia (4.5%). Of the 35 carcinomas detected in the 1095 patients, seven (20%) were early lesions, and 20% were only detected after Lugol staining (P = 0.02). High-grade dysplasia was only observed in group I patients and two-thirds of these lesions were only diagnosed after Lugol staining. The overall prevalence of low-grade dysplasia was 2.4%, and 77% of these were detected only after Lugol staining (P < 0.001). Conclusions: Lugol dye staining increases the sensitivity of esophageal endoscopy for the detection of high-grade dysplasia and cancer. The prevalence of dysplasia and cancer reached 9.9% in group 1, and we therefore believe that an endoscopic screening program could bejustified for patients with head and neck or tracheobronchial cancer.

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