Since the medical management of persons with adenomatous colorectal polyps differs from that of those with hyperplastic polyps, accuracy of diagnosis is essential. Although many physicians have grown confident that their skills of visual diagnosis are adequate, few data exist to support this confidence. In order to examine the accuracy of physicians' judgments regarding colorectal polyp histology, the visual diagnosis of physicians experienced in endoscopy was compared with the histologic report. Eighty-one polyps were discovered by flexible sigmoidoscopy among 718 participants in a colon cancer screening program. Eighty percent of all polyps were detected accurately. The diagnostic sensitivity of detecting adenomas was 69 percent, while specificity (accurate diagnosis of hyperplastic polyps) was 86 percent, and there were an additional eight false negative and eight false positive diagnoses. Further analyses revealed that there are individual patterns of diagnostic mistakes made by physicians and that mistakes frequently are related to polyp size. These findings are particularly important in light of the expanding numbers of relatively inexperienced primary care providers performing flexible sigmoidoscopy whose diagnoses may be strongly dependent on polyp size.
Based on a retrospective review of nine patients with adenocarcinoma in a Barrett's esophagus and the reports of similar cases in the literature, a staging system for this malignancy was devised. A progression of changes could be identified that corresponded to the stages. These changes consisted of dysplasia progressing to carcinoma in situ and invasive malignancy with metastases. Stage III disease carried the same grim prognosis as a similar stage of squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus. Earlier stages of adenocarcinoma of the esophagus appeared to have a better prognosis. White men with symptoms of reflux esophagitis, esophageal strictures, and/or hiatal hernias who have Barrett's esophagus extending proximal to the distal 10 cm of the esophagus appear to have a propensity to develop adenocarcinoma of the esophagus. Consideration should be given to antireflux surgery and close follow‐up by periodic esophagoscopy and biopsy of the esophagus in these patients. If neoplasia is found, the thoracic esophagus should be totally removed with the stomach or left colon anastomosed to the cervical esophagus. Because of the poor prognosis of Stage III disease, postoperative chemotherapy should be considered. Cancer 55:1353‐1360, 1985.
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