Quality control of endoscopic ultrasound in preoperative staging of esophageal cancer

Endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS) is generally established as the most sensitive diagnostic tool for the assessment of locoregional tumor stage in esophageal carcinoma. It therefore has a crucial impact on the decision whether patients should undergo surgery as primary treatment or should receive neo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Endoscopy 2007-08, Vol.39 (8), p.715-719
Hauptverfasser: Kutup, A., Link, B.-C., Schurr, P. G., Strate, T., Kaifi, J. T., Bubenheim, M., Seewald, S., Yekebas, E. F., Soehendra, N., Izbicki, J. R.
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container_end_page 719
container_issue 8
container_start_page 715
container_title Endoscopy
container_volume 39
creator Kutup, A.
Link, B.-C.
Schurr, P. G.
Strate, T.
Kaifi, J. T.
Bubenheim, M.
Seewald, S.
Yekebas, E. F.
Soehendra, N.
Izbicki, J. R.
description Endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS) is generally established as the most sensitive diagnostic tool for the assessment of locoregional tumor stage in esophageal carcinoma. It therefore has a crucial impact on the decision whether patients should undergo surgery as primary treatment or should receive neoadjuvant therapy. This study retrospectively evaluates the accuracy of EUS in tumor and nodal staging of prospectively evaluated patients with esophageal carcinoma in relation to tumor type, tumor grading, tumor site, and the influence of dilation. All 214 patients included in the study underwent surgery without neoadjuvant therapy and had tumor-free resection margins with no evidence of distant metastasis. EUS investigations were done at our Department of Interdisciplinary Endoscopy. EUS results were compared with the pathological findings. EUS correctly identified T status in 141 patients (65.9 %). The sensitivity and specificity in relation to T status were 68.1 % and 98.2 % respectively for T1, 40.9 % and 83.4 % for T2, 84.3 % and 64.6 % for T3, and 14.3 % and 98.8 % for T4. The overall diagnostic accuracy of EUS in relation to N status was 64.5 % (n = 138); sensitivity and specificity for the diagnosis of N1 were 93.8 % and 20 %, respectively. Sixty-eight (80 %) of 85 pN0-staged tumors were overstaged as uN1. Dilation had a significant influence on the accuracy of EUS staging in advanced tumors ( P = 0.02), whereas tumor grading impacted on EUS staging in early tumors ( P = 0.01). Tumor site and tumor type did not show any influence. Endosonographic staging of esophageal carcinoma is still unsatisfactory. An improvement in staging accuracy may be achieved by adding fine-needle aspiration biopsy (FNA) to EUS, because FNA improves N-stage accuracy, but it has no bearing on T-stage accuracy.
doi_str_mv 10.1055/s-2007-966655
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subjects Adult
Aged
Biological and medical sciences
Biopsy, Needle
Cohort Studies
Confidence Intervals
Endosonography - methods
Esophageal Neoplasms - diagnostic imaging
Esophageal Neoplasms - pathology
Esophageal Neoplasms - surgery
Esophagus
Female
Gastroenterology. Liver. Pancreas. Abdomen
Germany
Humans
Immunohistochemistry
Male
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Neoplasm Invasiveness - pathology
Neoplasm Staging - methods
Original article
Predictive Value of Tests
Preoperative Care - methods
Probability
Retrospective Studies
Risk Assessment
Sensitivity and Specificity
Total Quality Management
Tumors
title Quality control of endoscopic ultrasound in preoperative staging of esophageal cancer
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