Abstract:The impact of HFUPS on the treatment of SCN depends on their endoscopic characteristics. It is negligible for low-risk SCNs, and these lesions can be treated on the basis of their endoscopic appearance alone. Nevertheless, compared with endoscopy alone, HFUPS changed the subsequent therapeutic approach in a positive way for up to 42% of high-risk lesions, including those with a depressed component and an invasive pit pattern. These endoscopic features can therefore be recommended as the entry criteria for an H… Show more
“…Endoluminal endoscopic ultrasound shows more promise. For T staging, before removal of a suspicious polyp, endoscopic ultrasound has a reported accuracy of 66-93% [160,[213][214][215][216]. Hurlstone et al [213] showed a high level of accuracy in staging malignant polyps.…”
“…Endoluminal endoscopic ultrasound shows more promise. For T staging, before removal of a suspicious polyp, endoscopic ultrasound has a reported accuracy of 66-93% [160,[213][214][215][216]. Hurlstone et al [213] showed a high level of accuracy in staging malignant polyps.…”
“…EUS has been considered useful for tumor staging of colorectal cancers; however, its real clinical impact for deciding on the indication for surgical operation is still not clear [13][14][15]. In the present EUS study, when the change for the third layer (submucosal layer) was 1 millimeter or more the histological SM invasion depth was 4.3 mm.…”
Purpose: To retrospectively analyze the results of our therapeutic recommendations for EMR and surgical operation using thin-probe EUS for patients with early colorectal neoplasms.
Methods:We retrospectively analyzed the therapeutic recommendation for using EUS and the results in 63 lesions of 63 patients. When the depth of the change for the third layer (submucosal layer) was 1 millimeter or more, we recommended surgical operation(EUS operation-recommended group).
Results: Surgical operation was suitable for all of lesions in the EUS-operation-recommended group (23 lesions of 23 patients).
Conclusion:We think that a change of 1 millimeter or more in the third layer (corresponding to the submucosal layer) in EUS for colorectal neoplasms may be a useful finding for surgical decision making.
“…Imaging methods used to diagnose tumour size and the degree of malignant invasion have limited sensitivity and specificity . Determining the relationship between the size of residual rectal wall lesions after neoadjuvant CRT and the pathological response was the subject of a study by Smith et al .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When selecting patients suitable for total mesorectal excision, careful preoperative staging is especially important, as well as a perfect surgical technique with excision of the lesion across the full thickness of the rectal wall with a 10-mm border of macroscopically healthy tissue [18,19]. Imaging methods used to diagnose tumour size and the degree of malignant invasion have limited sensitivity and specificity [20][21][22][23][24]. Determining the relationship between the size of residual rectal wall lesions after neoadjuvant CRT and the pathological response was the subject of a study by Smith et al [7].…”
The study demonstrated that, even for small tumours involving only one rectal quadrant, the risk of lymph nodal involvement was about 25%. Had the patients undergone local excision the treatment would have been incomplete.
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