Reminder of important clinical lesson
The definition and management of Barretts oesophagus: a case report, review of the literature and a suggestion for the future
1 MRC Cancer Cell Unit, Hutchison-MRC Research Centre, Hills Road, Cambridge, CB22 0XZ, UK
2 Queens Hospital, Department of Pathology, Romford, Essex, RM7 0BE, UK
3 Barking, Havering and Redbridge NHS Trust, Department of Surgery, Rom Valley Way, Romford, RM7 0AG, UK
4 Department of Gastroenterology, Queens Hospital, Romford, Essex, RM7 0BE, UK
Correspondence to:
Rebecca Fitzgerald, rcf{at}hutchison-mrc.cam.ac.uk
The definition of Barretts oesophagus continues to evolve and there has been divergence in the diagnostic criteria internationally, which has implications for surveillance practices and research inclusion criteria. Here we describe the case of a 69-year-old female with 10 cm of gastric-type columnar-lined oesophagus confirmed on histochemical staining. Surveillance biopsies, performed according to protocol, revealed an intramucosal adenocarcinoma. The patient was successfully treated with a transhiatal oesophagectomy and a detailed examination of the entire surgical specimen confirmed that the columnar oesophagus was lined by gastric villiform mucosa complicated by intramucosal carcinoma, on the background of dysplasia with no intestinal metaplasia. This highlights the spectrum of metaplastic epithelia that can harbour malignant potential. There is a need for an international consensus on the classification of Barretts oesophagus to aid research progress. Therefore, we propose a new classification for Barretts oesophagus based on a combination of endoscopic and histopathological features.
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