Esophageal Adenocarcinoma Methods and Protocols

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adjuvant therapy (administration of therapeutic agents such as
chemoradiation before a main treatment) whereas the post-
neoadjuvant pathological prognostic staging group (yp) is for
patients having neoadjuvant therapy to the cancer before the
esophagectomy (see Note 3).


  1. Determine the extent of involvement of the adenocarcinoma
    in the esophagus and the adjacent structures (T stage). T stage
    of the tumors can be classified into T0, Tis, T1 (T1a and T1b),
    T2, T3, and T4 (T4a and T4b) (see Note 4).

  2. Count the number of regional lymph nodes involved by the
    adenocarcinoma and assign the cancer to subgroups N0, N1,
    N2, and N3 (see Note 5).

  3. Determine whether there are distant metastases and grouped
    the cancer into M0 or M1 (see Note 6).

  4. For pathological staging group after esophagectomy with no
    preoperative neoadjuvant therapy, obtain the histological grade
    (G) of the esophageal adenocarcinoma from pathological
    examination of the resected esophageal (see Note 7).

  5. Refer to the Table in the eighth edition of the AJCC Cancer
    Staging Manual (based on the T, N, M, and G) in order to get
    an overall staging prognostic group. The staging prognostic
    groups broadly divide the adenocarcinoma into four stage
    groups: I, II, III, and IV (see Note 8). These subgroups have
    different biological behaviors.

  6. Additional factors recommended for clinical care include
    tumor length, lymphovascular invasion, histoviability, surgical
    margin, extranodal extension, and HER2 status of the esopha-
    geal adenocarcinoma.


4 Notes



  1. The esophagus starts below the hypopharynx and has two por-
    tions: cervical and thoracic esophagus. Clinically, the location
    of the esophageal cancer is identified by endoscopic measure-
    ments from the incisors. The esophagus starts at approximately
    15 cm from the incisor. The lower extent of an esophageal
    cancer is a controversial concept. It is difficult to define whether
    the adenocarcinoma originates from esophagus or from the
    stomach if both esophagus and stomach are involved. In future,
    genetic signatures of the cancer may identify the features that
    characterize the carcinoma from these two sites. In the current
    edition of staging, a tumor of the epicenter within 2 cm of the
    esophagogastric junction is classified as esophageal cancer.
    Thus, any tumor with epicenter more than 2 cm from the
    esophagogastric junction.


Pathological Staging and Esophageal Adenocarcinoma
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