Additional endoscopic treatments for patients with positive lateral margins after endoscopic resection of early esophageal squamous cell carcinoma

Oncol Lett. 2022 Dec 23;25(2):67. doi: 10.3892/ol.2022.13653. eCollection 2023 Feb.

Abstract

There are currently no well-established treatment strategies for early esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) for patients with only positive lateral margin (LM+) following endoscopic resection (ER). The present study aimed to find a treatment strategy for patients with early ESCC with non-curative resection (non-CR) and only LM+ following ER. In total, 511 patients with early ESCC treated at the Fourth Hospital of Hebei Medical University (Shijiazhuang, China) with ER were retrospectively analyzed, 41 of which (8%) were patients with only LM+ after non-CR. Of these, 28 patients received re-ER and 13 received additional surgical treatment. The clinicopathological characteristics of patients were analyzed and those who underwent additional surgery vs. re-ER were compared. Residual cancer cells were found in 27 patients (27/41, 65.9%) following re-ER or additional surgery. A significant increase in residual cancer cells was observed in patients with poorly differentiated cancer and patients with multiple LM+ (P=0.03 and P=0.015, respectively). Older patients and patients with single LM+ tended to choose re-ER (P=0.023 and P=0.038, respectively). In addition, there were three cases (3/13, 23.1%) of lymph node metastasis in the additional surgery group. However, within the limited follow-up time (mean, 36.1±24.1 months), no recurrence or metastasis was found in the remaining patients. The results showed that re-ER may be a more suitable additional therapy compared with surgery for patients with LM+ following non-CR, at least in the medium-term.

Keywords: early esophageal squamous cell carcinoma; endoscopic resection; non-curative resection; positive lateral margin.

Grants and funding

The present study was supported by The Key Topics of Medical Science Research of Hebei Provincial Health Commission (grant no. 20190765).