Background: Local and multimodal therapeutic strategies for tumours of the oesophagus and gastric cardia, require precise preoperative staging. Endosonography is considered the most accurate staging method, while computed tomography (CT) has limitations especially in the evaluation of local infiltration. Macroscopic endoscopic evaluation was reported to be accurate in selected series, but no study has yet compared all three staging modalities. Methods: One hundred and seventeen unselected patients with tumours of the oesophagus and gastric cardia were prospectively staged first by the endoscopic macroscopic appearance and then by endosonography. All patients had preoperative CT scans, however, only the 36 patients receiving the scans at our institution were included in the study. The preoperative staging results were then compared to postoperative histology which was available as the gold standard in all included patients. Kappa statistics were used to exclude chance agreement of the clinical staging results with the pathohistological findings. Differences between the resulting ĸ values for the different staging modalities were analysed with a jack-knife test. Results: Endoscopic macroscopic staging and endosonography (accuracy 67 and 69%, weighted ĸ 0.78 and 0.84) were significantly more accurate than CT (accuracy 33%, weighted ĸ 0.44) for determination of the T category (p = 0.006 and p = 0.001). After exclusion of tumours of the cardia (n = 33), the accuracy of macroscopic and endosonographic staging (accuracy 72 and 75%, weighted ĸ 0.86 and 0.88) increased and remained more accurate than CT (accuracy 50%, weighted ĸ 0.62). The main pitfall in our series in staging the T category was the overestimation of T2 tumours in the cardia as T3 or even as T4 tumours due to the inability to visualise the serosa. The accuracy of predicting lymph node metastasis was 68% for macroscopic endoscopic, 79% for endosonographic, and 67% for CT staging. Only endosonographic staging was significantly different from chance agreement with histology (weighted ĸ = 0.56). Endosonographic staging was significantly more accurate than endoscopic macroscopic and CT staging (p = 0.03). Conclusions: Endosonography is the most accurate staging modality for overall preoperative staging of oesophageal and cardial tumours. Endoscopic macroscopic staging allows a reasonably accurate assessment of the T category.
The model reproduced the cooling effect of perfused tissue during RFA. The ablation areas produced under perfusion conditions had smaller diameters despite longer exposure times and higher energy deposition.
Migration of a retained surgical sponge into the bowel is a rare cause of bowel obstruction. Thus far, there have not been any reports that the site of initial migration of the sponge was identified by imaging studies or surgical exploration because the onset of symptoms is usually delayed. Unique about the case presented herein is that a barium meal follow-through study revealed a duodenual fistula that had developed after uneventful cholecystectomy due to a retained surgical sponge that had migrated into the duodenum and obstructed the distal jejunum. Imaging findings are presented and discussed.
Patients with advanced GIST exhibiting focal disease progression during imatinib therapy may benefit from surgical resection and imatinib continuation. Imatinib resistance seems to be partial in these patients.
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