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Esophageal adenocarcinoma - Endoscopy
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Esophageal adenocarcinoma - Endoscopy

Black arrow marks a smooth raised tumor arising in the esophageal mucosa
(Description By:Martin Nadel, M.D. )
(Image Contrib. by:Martin Nadel, M.D. UCHC )
Adenocarcinoma of Esophagus
Etiology

The great majority of esophageal adenocarcinoma arise in the lower third of the esophagus in the setting of pre-existant Barrett's esophagus
Since Barrett's esophagus represents metaplastic mucosa secondary to reflux esophagitis it is worth reviewing esophageal reflux
Pathogenesis

The evolution of esophageal adenocarcinoma follows the following path: reflux esophagitis-metaplastic Barrett's esophageal mucosa-glandular epithelial dysplasia-adenocarcinoma
The incidence of adenocarcinoma in Barrett's esophagus is probably less than 5-10% but is really unknown because the true incidence of Barrett's is not known,
Epidemiology

Adenocarcinomas represent 50% of esophageal cancer (NCI CancerNet 7/97)
The incidence of esophageal adenocarcinoma is increasing
The mean age at diagnosis (64yrs) and the marked male predominance is similar to that of squamous carcinoma
In contrast to squamous carcinoma adenocarcinoma is found predominantly in whites reflecting its origin in Barrett's esophagus
General Gross Description

Adenocarcinomas occur almost exclusively in the distal esophagus where they represent almost half of the tumors of the distal third
Tumor is first seen as a thickened plaque-like white mucosa
Larger lesions form exophytic polypoid masses which are white, and usually have well demarcated margins
Occasional tumors appear papillary
Tumor spread is through the esophagus into periesophageal tissues
These tumors may be multifocal
General Microscopic Description

Esophageal adenocarcinomas are microscopically indistinguishable from gastric adenocarcinomas
The majority are classified as moderate to well differentiated intestinal type and form glands with moderately large columnar to cuboidal epithelium having nuclei with a coarse chromatin pattern, nucleoli, and ample cytoplasm within which mucin can be demonstrated
A minority of tumors will have the diffuse type pattern with signet ring cells present
Occasionally squamous metaplasia or papillary features are noted
Clinical Correlation

Dysphagia and weight loss are the two most common symptoms
Symptoms of pre-existing reflux are present in less than 50% of patients
Five year survival is dismal being less than 15%
Primary therapy is surgery or chemothery with radiation therapy, but chemotherapy and radiation therapy are less effective in adenocarcinoma than in sqamous ca.
References

Gastrointestinal Pathology, Fenoglio-Preiser CM (ed) New York, Raven Press, 1989, pp. 96-100
Adenocarcinoma of Esophagus
Synopsis by: Martin Nadel, M.D. (T62000M81403)[372]
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