Autores
Lixia Liu, Wayne L Hofstetter, Asif Rashid, Stephen G Swisher, Arlene M Correa, Jaffer A Ajani, Stanley R Hamilton, Tsung-Teh Wu
Fecha de publicación
2005/8/1
Revista
The American journal of surgical pathology
Volumen
29
Número
8
Páginas
1079-1085
Editor
LWW
Descripción
Superficially invasive esophageal adenocarcinomas are a heterogeneous group of tumors, including tumors invading into mucosa and submucosa. The prognostic significance of the depth of tumor invasion and lymph node status in this group of patients remain unclear. We evaluated 90 consecutive patients with resected T1 adenocarcinoma of esophagus or esophagogastric junction. The T1 tumors were classified into four groups based on the depth of invasion: T1a, invading into lamina propria; T1b, into muscularis mucosae; T1c, into superficial submucosa; and T1d, into deep submucosa. The depth of tumor invasion was compared with clinicopathologic features. The depth of tumor invasion was significantly associated with the presence of lymph node metastasis (36% in T1d, 8% in T1c, 12% in T1b, and 0% in T1a; P< 0.001) and with tumor size (76%> 1.2 cm in T1d, 75% in T1c, 35% in T1b, and 25% in T1a; P< …
Citas totales
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