Recent advances in early esophageal cancer: diagnosis and treatment based on endoscopy.
Hang YangBing HuPublished in: Postgraduate medicine (2021)
Esophageal cancer (EC) often cannot be discovered in time because of its asymptomatic or symptom-atypical characteristics in early stage. The risk and probability of lymph node metastasis and distant metastasis increase correspondingly as the cancer aggressively invades deeper layers. Treatment regimens may be shifted to surgery and chemoradiotherapy (CRT) from endoscopic eradication therapy (EET) with poor quality of life and prognosis. It is imperative to identify dysplasia and EC early and enable early curative endoscopic treatments. Newer methods have been attempted in the clinical setting to achieve early detection at a more microscopic and precise level. Newer imaging techniques and artificial intelligence (AI) technology have been involved in targeted biopsies and will gradually unveil the visualization of pathology in the future. Early detection and diagnosis are the prerequisite to choose personal and precise treatment regimens. EET has also been undergoing development and improvement to benefit more patients as the first option or the firstly chosen alternative therapy, when compared with esophagectomy. More clinical studies are needed to provide more possibilities for EET.
Keyphrases
- artificial intelligence
- lymph node metastasis
- papillary thyroid
- early stage
- machine learning
- ultrasound guided
- end stage renal disease
- big data
- chronic kidney disease
- minimally invasive
- lymph node
- prognostic factors
- high resolution
- peritoneal dialysis
- cancer therapy
- helicobacter pylori infection
- locally advanced
- replacement therapy
- atrial fibrillation
- drug delivery
- helicobacter pylori
- patient reported outcomes
- robot assisted
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- surgical site infection