Gastric squamous metaplasia observed by image-enhanced endoscopy

DEN Open. 2023 Mar 14;3(1):e219. doi: 10.1002/deo2.219. eCollection 2023 Apr.

Abstract

A 61-year-old Helicobacter pylori-positive female with gastroesophageal reflux disease has undergone surveillance endoscopy every year for 13 years at Tokyo Medical University Hospital. At the first surveillance in 2009, conventional white light endoscopy showed a 10-mm whitish slightly depressed lesion at the lesser curvature of the gastric cardia. This lesion gradually increased in size to 15 mm over the 13-year observational period. Indigo carmine chromoendoscopy, narrow band imaging, and texture and color enhancement imaging in both mode 1 and mode 2 clearly emphasized the presence of a depressed whitish mucosa around the gastric mucosa compared with white light imaging. None of the three image-enhanced endoscopy techniques showed any abnormality in the vascular or structural pattern. Pathological findings showed squamous epithelium without atypia and revealed no evidence of malignancy in the stomach. We thus report a case of gastric squamous metaplasia without gastric neoplastic lesion in the gastric cardia whose lesions were endoscopically observed to change the size for more than 10 years and whose lesions were endoscopically evaluated with a texture and color enhancement imaging mode 1 and mode 2 and narrow band imaging.

Keywords: ectopic mucosa; gastric squamous metaplasia; image‐enhanced endoscopy; narrow‐band imaging; texture and color enhancement imaging.

Publication types

  • Case Reports