“…Nevertheless, intramucosal tubular adenocarcinoma has been confirmed to have a low risk of lymph node metastasis [14,18,19] and, therefore, can be safely removed endoscopically. In histopathology, most early tubular adenocarcinomas originate in the isthmus/neck of a gastric unit along the lesser curvature in the distal stomach [13,20]. A pathologic diagnosis of early tubular adenocarcinoma requires 2 essential histology features [20,21,22]: (1) nuclear dysplastic changes with hyperchromasia, nuclear enlargement in the size of 3-4 naïve small lymphocytes, high nuclear-to-cytoplasmic ratio, marked pleomorphism, increased mitotic figures with atypical forms, prominent nucleoli, and cellular immaturity; and (2) architectural abnormalities with a spectrum of growth patterns at low power view, such as anastomosing, fusing, branching, cribriforming, budding, back-to-back crowding, microcysts, disunion, spiky glands with sharp projections, single cell clusters, abortive glands, and necrotic debris in the gland lumens.…”