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Revista Española de Enfermedades Digestivas
Print version ISSN 1130-0108
Rev. esp. enferm. dig. vol.105 n.8 Madrid Sep. 2013
https://dx.doi.org/10.4321/S1130-01082013000800003
Oncological outcomes after endoscopic removal of malignant colorectal polyps
Resultados oncológicos tras la extirpación endoscópica de pólipos colorrectales malignos
Bruno Moreira Gonçalves1, Vasco Fontainhas1, Ana Célia Caetano1,2,3, Aníbal Ferreira1,2,3, Raquel Gonçalves1, Pedro Bastos1 and Carla Rolanda1,2,3
1Department of Gastroenterology. Hospital Braga. Portugal
2Life and Health Sciences Research Institute (ICVS). School of Health Sciences. University of Minho. Braga, Portugal
3ICVS/3B's - PT Government Associate Laboratory. Braga/Guimarães, Portugal
ABSTRACT
Objective: malignant colorectal polyp, defined by submucosally invasive adenocarcinoma, is the earliest form of clinically relevant colorectal cancer (CRC). After endoscopic resection additional surgery may be necessary, although decision criteria remain debatable. The objective of this study was to assess oncologic outcomes in terms of locoregional disease and to identify areas of improvement that may facilitate patients' management.
Methods: retrospective study of 40 patients with T1 CRC endoscopically resected between 2007 and 2012. Clinicopathological features were assessed and correlated with residual disease (RD), defined as presence of adenocarcinoma in intestinal wall and/or lymph nodes.
Results: thirty-one patients underwent surgery while 9 were followed-up. After surgery, RD was confirmed in 15 (48.4 %) patients: 8 (53.3 %) wall disease, 5 (33 %) nodal metastasis, and 2 (13.3 %) with both. No recurrence was detected in the follow-up group. The characteristics of the lesions that were associated with DR were sessile configuration (p = 0.03), the degree of differentiation G3 (p = 0.01) and intercepted/indeterminate margins (p = 0.01). Twenty-two patients were operated because of inadequate evaluation, mainly due to piecemeal resection, and half of them were disease free. Postoperative complications were found in 9 (30 %) patients, mainly anastomotic leakage that was associated with rectum anterior resection (p = 0.03).
Conclusions: surgery should be considered in the presence of any risk factor for residual disease, while follow-up can be offered in low risk settings. Was also demonstrated a clear need for technical improvement in endoscopic resection and pathology evaluation in order to prevent unnecessary surgeries.
Key words: Malignant polyp. Postoperative complications. Residual disease. Risk factors. Submucosal invasion.
Introduction
More than 95 % of colorectal cancer (CRC) arises from adenomas throughout the recognized adenoma-adenocarcinoma sequence (1,2). Therefore, during CRC screening the adenomatous lesion is the target, and its resection by endoscopic polypectomy has shown to reduce the risk of advanced adenomas and future colorectal cancer (3,4).
With progressive technique refinements the endoscopic therapy became safe and effective to treat the majority of colorectal precursor lesions, whether they are pedunculated, sessil or flat, independently of size. By principle, polyps should be resected en bloc to provide adequate evaluation of resection margins and possible tumor spreading. If this can be easily achieved in pedunculated or smaller polyps, for sessil lesions larger than 2 cm, piecemeal endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR) is the commonly used technique. However, endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) has been used as an effective mode of achieving en bloc resection of large, sessile and flat lesions, although it has higher perforation rates, greater procedure duration, and requires a demanding learning curve (5-8).
Several terms have been used to describe carcinoma that is restricted to the epithelial layer without invasion into the lamina propria (high-grade dysplasia, carcinoma "in situ", intraepithelial neoplasia) (6). Intramucosal carcinoma is a carcinoma characterized by invasion into the lamina propria. In all these situations endoscopic resection can offer a curative treatment (9). However, when the carcinoma breaches the muscularis mucosa and spreads to the submucosa (where the lymphatic and vascular structures are), the polyp is considered to have become malignant with potential risk for lymph nodes or distant sites metastasis (6,10,11). These lesions represent the earliest form of clinically relevant CRC, corresponding to 0.5-8 % of the endoscopic resected adenomas, and in this case additional surgery may be necessary to ensure complete tumor clearance (12,13).
Several studies have suggested that certain features may be valuable predictors of lymph node metastasis or persistent residual tumor after endoscopic resection. These factors include deep submucosal invasion, poor or undifferentiation, lymphovascular invasion, and positive resection margins (6,10,13-15). Nevertheless, the identification of those patients remains a challenge, in fact even in the presence of high-risk features residual disease is noted in 15-20 % of the operated cases, and nodal disease is detected in a smaller proportion (13). Thus, around 84 % of patients may be undergoing significant morbidity due to unnecessary surgical interventions after endoscopic resection (14).
In this sequence, we propose ourselves to perform a retrospective analysis on the cumulative experience in the management of malignant colorectal polyps resected endoscopically in our department. Besides studying the clinicopathological features of patients and tumors, this work aims: a) to evaluate the oncologic outcomes in terms of locoregional disease (colorectal wall residual or recurrent tumor, and lymph node metastasis); and b) to study predictors and areas of work improvement that may facilitate patient selection for surgery versus surveillance.
Patients and methods
We studied retrospectively all patients with malignant colonic polyps treated by endoscopic resection at the Gastroenterology Department of the Hospital Braga, between January 2007 and November 2012. Data was collected through a complete review of patients' clinical, endoscopic, histologic and surgical reports. This study was approved by the Human Research Ethics Committee of Hospital Braga.
The main inclusion criteria was a histologically proven submucosal invasive adenocarcinoma in a flat, sessile or semi-pedunculated lesion, or in case of pedunculated polyps a submucosal deep invasion larger than 3,000 µ from the neck (Haggitt level 2) or a free margin inferior to 2,000 µ (6), resected in our department and subsequently submitted to surgery or under follow-up for at least 24 months. Patients who did not accomplish the former or received a macroscopically incomplete polypectomy were excluded from this study.
Endoscopic resection was decided by the operator after macroscopic criteria assessment, as lifting sign, morphology, friability, induration, and ulceration, according to Paris Classification (16). Depressed (0-IIc) and ulcerated (0-III) lesions weren't removed and the patients were referred to surgery. Technical approach included almost always the injection of saline solution into the submucosa and the lift-and-cut technique. EMR was performed preferably en bloc, when impossible, the endoscopist performed a piecemeal EMR and applied argon plasma coagulation (APC) in the visible vessels and the borders of some cases.
Tumors characteristics
Tumors were evaluated in order to macroscopic and microscopic parameters. Macroscopically they were classified according to: a) dimension; b) morphology (polypoid -pedunculated and semi-pedunculated; non-polypoid- sessile and flat lesions) (16); and c) location (rectum, left colon and right colon, separated in the mid transverse). Specimens were microscopically characterized for: a) resection margin status; b) histological type; c) grade of differentiation; and d) presence of perineural or lymphovascular (lymphatic and venous) invasion. Resection margins were defined as: Tumor-free or complete (if malignant cells were not present within 100 µ) and incomplete margins (whenever the previous requirement was not met -intersected by diathermy effect or undetermined, when the exact margin and orientation could not be assessed, due to piecemeal resection). According with the regular classification of intestinal-type adenocarcinoma in four grades (6), for stage of differentiation we considered two groups: Well-moderately differentiated (grade I-II) and poorly differentiated carcinoma (grade III-IV). Regarding vascular invasion, it was defined by the presence of cancer in an endothelia-lined channel surrounded by smooth-muscular cells. Lymphatic invasion was characterized by the presence of tumor cells within a true endothelial-lined channel in the absence of red blood cells. Ideally, the depth of submucosal invasion should be assessed in non-pedunculated lesions by Kikuchi classification (Sm1, Sm2 and Sm3) (17). However, besides deep invasion in pedunculated polyps, this measure was not available in our pathological reports, because the majority of the lesions underwent piecemeal resection, and we believe also due to the lack of experience in this evaluation.
Clinical approaches and outcomes
All the patients were proposed for surgical resection, due to an inadequate histological evaluation (incomplete margins or absence of deep invasion evaluation), or the presence of unfavorable risk factors (lymphovascular invasion or poor differentiation). Patients who underwent surgical resection received regular oncologic orientation and follow-up (FU). Patients that refused surgery or had prohibitive comorbidities were included in a follow-up scheme that, besides clinical evaluation, included annual measurement of carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) levels and abdominal CT scan (colon cancers) or pelvic CT/MRI (rectal cancers). Control colonoscopy was performed at three, six and twelve months after endoscopic resection and then annually repeated. In order to achieve valuable outcomes in FU patients, a minimal duration of 24 months was required. This was based in previous studies reporting time to recurrence up to 22 months (9).
Surgical and FU groups were both evaluated for oncological outcomes, mainly locoregional disease (wall tumor and/or local lymph node metastasis) and distant metastasis. Residual disease was defined as adenocarcinoma present in colorectal wall in the segmentectomy sample, and recurrent disease as adenocarcinoma identified by colonoscopy during the follow-up program. Lymph node metastasis (LNM) were considered whenever present in the resected specimen or detected in radiologic FU.
Statistical analysis
Categorical variables were summarized using proportions and assessed by Chi-squared and Fisher's exact tests. Continuous variables were summarized using mean (+/- SD) and median range. T-test was used to compare continuous variables. All tests were two sided and the level of significance was set at p < 0.05. Statistical analysis was made on SPSS 20.0 for Windows®.
Results
Since 2007, 63 patients were diagnosed with malignant colonic polyps after endoscopic resection in our department. Three of those patients were immediately excluded because they had macroscopically incomplete polypectomy. Of the total 60 patients, 31 underwent complementary surgical resection, while 29 were included in the FU program, either by older age and/or co-morbidities (23 patients) or surgery refusal (6 patients). Twenty patients in the FU were excluded because 3 of them did not accomplished the adequate FU, 10 had a FU considered insufficient for conclusions (less than 24 months), and 7 were lost during the FU program. Figure 1 represents the flowchart of the patients' management.
Finally the population of this study included 40 patients, in which 29 were male and 11 female (♂/♀= 2.6/1). Mean age was 64.3 years (range 36-90 years) and the mean tumor size was 23.6 mm (range 10-50 mm). En bloc resection was performed in 25 patients, while 15 patients received endoscopic piecemeal resection. The characteristics of the removed tumors are listed in table I.
Patients who received complementary surgical resection had a mean age of 61.7 years. All of them had lymph node dissection and the mean number of retrieved lymph nodes was 8.7. Colorectal segmentectomy was performed in 22 of the patients (71%) -by laparoscopy in 14 and open approach in 8 patients- rectum anterior resection (RAR) was performed in 9 patients (29.0 %). Postoperative complications were found in 9 (30 %) patients, 2 anastomotic hemorrhages (22.2 %) and 7 anastomotic leakages (77.8 %). Leakage is a major concern and in our patients it was statistically associated with RAR procedure (p = 0.034). Colostomy (definitive or temporary) was performed in 3 patients who had post-RAR anastomotic leakage.
In surgically resected group, global residual disease (in colon wall and/or lymph nodes) was noted in 15 patients (48.4 %). In 8 patients (53.3 %), disease was exclusively limited to the colonic wall, 5 patients (33.3 %) presented nodal metastasis and 2 patients (13.3 %) presented both colonic wall residual lesion and lymph node metastasis. In the follow-up after surgery, no patients had recurrence.
Patients who did not undergo additional surgery and that accomplished the inclusion criteria had a median follow-up period of 36.1 months (range, 24-52 months). The mean age was 73.1 years. Only one of these 9 patients had a risk factor for residual disease (undetermined margin). During the follow-up period, no evidence of recurrence was detected.
Outcomes according to patients and tumors characteristics on univariate analysis are summarized in table II. It can be seen that gender (p = 0.04), polyp configuration (p = 0.03), differentiation (p = 0.02) and margin status (p = 0.02) were factors for colonic wall disease. No significant correlations have been established for lymph node metastasis. Multivariate analysis showed that margin status was the only independent risk factor for wall disease (p = 0.02; OR = 0.09; 95 % CI = 0.01-0.6).
Looking for the classical risk factors of residual disease, besides the submucosal invasion which depth was not available for study, we found that incomplete margins, presence of lymphovascular invasion and poor differentiation were the main risk factors for residual disease and, therefore, indications for subsequent surgery. Twenty-one patients (52.5 %) had only one risk factor for residual disease and 6 patients (15 %) had simultaneously two risk factors. Risk factors for residual disease and resultant outcomes are summarized in table III. Univariate analysis showed that the presence of only one risk factor is determinant of poor outcome (p = 0.08) while the presence of no risk factor is strongly associated with lower incidence of residual disease (p = 0.13).
When evaluating the features that determined the decision for surgery we find out that 22 patients underwent surgical resection because of inadequate initial specimen assessment -undetermined margins, intercepted margins, lack of depth submucosal evaluation in some cases of en bloc resection- and in 11 of those patients (50 %) there was no residual disease at the resection specimen. There was no significant difference between rectum or colon distribution, as it is presented in table IV. However 80 % of patients that besides en bloc resection and complete margins were submitted to surgical resection (due to lacking of depth submucosal evaluation), and 41 % of patients with intercepted or undetermined margins (mainly related to piecemeal resection) had no residual disease.
Discussion
Endoscopic resection affords patients with the typical advantages of minimally invasive procedures, but in T1 (tumor invading submucosa) colorectal cancers it should be used selectively because of decreased certainty regarding oncologic outcomes when local recurrence or LNM is considered (14,18). Many studies attempted the definition of potential predictors for locoregional residual disease, however the indications for subsequent colectomy versus follow-up remain controversial and still not properly established, persisting a surgical overtreatment rate that can achieve 80 % (13,14). In our 40 studied patients, only 15 had residual disease, thus 63 % of our population was "cured" at colonoscopy. Contrarily to other studies (13-15) none of the followed-up patients presented recurrent disease, probably in relationship with the small number of patients included in this group and an associated selection bias, since this group had only one patient with risk factor for locoregional disease (undetermined margins).
The possible presence of LNM is an important and enigmatic aspect, its incidence is reported between 6.6 to 14.4 % (12,13,18,19) in agreement with our calculated rate of 17.5 % LNM. For more than 20 years investigators have searched for its determinants. The classical associated risk factors are depth (Sm3) submucosal invasion, poor differentiation, lymphovascular invasion, and tumor budding (20-23). Radical oncologic surgery is recommended for patients with any of the previous factors (14). In our analysis, as would be expected, we were not able to establish significant associations in this field. In fact, besides the sample limitation of our study we also could not incorporate in analysis any information related to depth of submucosal invasion or tumor budding. Regarding lymphovascular invasion, usually assumed as an important independent factor, we found that from the 7 patients with lymphovascular invasion only 2 had LNM, furthermore lymphovascular invasion was not seen in 5 of the 7 patients with LNM. This is congruent with other studies (13) and stresses the possibility of other factors involved, as well as the limited sensitivity, specificity, and difficult identification of lymphovascular invasion in small, fragmented, with extraction artifacts specimens. A recent exhaustive study on this topic demonstrated that the histopathologic factors for LNM in T1 colorectal cancers are: Grade 3, angiolymphatic invasion, budding and the absence of background adenoma (18). Suh et al. did not find a significant relationship between LNM and depth of submucosal invasion, indicating the need for further evaluation in this area. Furthermore, in the largest study comparing the long-term outcomes for patients with submucosal invasive CCR, none of the classical risk factors were associated with recurrence (24). Instead, the risk for local recurrence was significantly higher in high-risk patients (incomplete resection, poor differentiation, vascular invasion, depth of submucosal invasion more than 1,000 μ) with submucosal rectal cancer than in patients with submucosal colon cancer when treated only with endoscopic resection. In another study the immunohistochemical expression pattern of several proteins in resected malignant polyps was also not associated with residual or recurrent disease (23). Thus there is a clear need for further evaluation in this area.
Besides LNM, other recognized oncologic outcome is wall residual disease, in this case the accepted risk factor is the margin status. When the resection margin is involved, or is less than 1 mm, the relapse ranges between 21 and 33 % (25). Patients in whom margins could not be conclusively determined had the same incidence of residual disease as patients with positive margins (13). However, whether the requisite distance should be > 1, > 2, or > 3 mm or only a clear margin is still under debate (21,25-27). In our analysis we found a 25 % rate of local wall disease and the margin status showed to be an independent risk factor for that, mostly in sessile lesions that are our main group, in agreement with earlier studies as Hassan et al. pointed out (22,28,29). Polyp configuration, differentiation and margin status were also statistically relevant for wall disease. This point is mainly related with technical aspects, like piecemeal resection or poor specimen orientation, so also here there is space for improvement in resection approach and specimen processing.
When evaluating the available risk factors for residual disease (incomplete margins, lymphovascular invasion and poor differentiation), in both operated and non-operated patients, and the resultant outcomes we verified that patients with any of those risk factors had a significant risk for locoregional disease. By opposite its absence is strongly associated with a decreased risk, strengthening the idea that submucosal invasion itself is not a sufficient indication for subsequent surgery.
During the analysis we verified that 22 of the operated patients underwent surgical approach by defect of information -cases with inadequate margins evaluation (intercepted and undetermined) and cases resected en bloc lacking depth submucosal assessment- without any additional risk factor. Half of these surgeries were unnecessary as no residual disease was detected, this was even higher (80 %) when considering the cases which only lack the depth invasion assessment, in those 5 cases only one had residual disease (LNM). This is in accord with initial studies stating 15-20 % potential risk for LNM in submucosally invasive cancers. From the recognized intrinsic tumors' properties associated with this, only depth and budding evaluation is missing. The point here is that besides patients having the current associated risk factors who may be undergoing unnecessary operations as some Korean authors described (14,18), we detect that 50 % of our patients undergone unnecessary operations preventively by defect information and inadequate evaluation.
The decision whether to perform an endoscopic resection should be individualized. Size and sessile or flat morphology of the polyp are associated with incomplete endoscopic resection (30). To our knowledge there is no study stressing, what we believe to be a frequent western countries' problem, related to poor endoscopic experience in ESD, the spread use of piecemeal resection in larger lesions, and with the poor experience of pathologists in evaluating submucosal behaviour of tumors without the complete wall specimen. We recognize the long learning curve on ESD, but these results justify some efforts as is being done for early gastric cancer. The rectum is a safe and easier place for beginners (31-33), additionally it is the origin of significant surgical complications as we described, thus avoiding unnecessary morbidity would be highly valuable. This would also allow an immediate and adequate orientation of specimen and a better evaluation of tumor architecture, depth, lymphovascular and perineural invasion, budding, vertical and horizontal margins, and a consequent increased experience of our pathology colleagues (34). Another important aspect is the characterization of lesions before endoscopic resection improving suspicious of invasion. Sometimes macroscopic appearance do not preclude a piecemeal approach, furthermore, smaller lesions are frequently approached in a simplistic manner using snare without submucosal injection, precluding adequate deep evaluation even in en bloc resections. New technologies on endoscopic image, as magnifying chromoendoscopy and narrow band imaging, will probably improve resection approach criteria (35,36).
The limitations of this study were small sample size, which can influence the prevalence of residual or recurrent disease after endoscopic resection, its retrospective design and some points of the histologic evaluation. However our aim was not only the detection of risk factors, we knew from the beginning that these predictors are being exhaustively assessed in other studies, and that we do not have regularly some of those for clinical decision. We aimed to evaluate our real-life experience and consequently infer areas of improvement. In order to reduce overtreatment with surgery and its complications, it's crucial an enhance in endoscopic pre-histological diagnosis of invasiveness, improve mucosal resection and histologic evaluation (37).
In conclusion, we corroborate other studies pointing out the need for surgery in the presence of any risk factor versus cautious follow-up in case of no risk factors. Moreover we demonstrated that a significant proportion of patients have been unnecessarily operated due to technical aspects that can be improved. Furthermore, these improvements would be safely introduced for rectal lesions, precluding the significant surgical morbidity in this area.
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Correspondence:
Bruno Moreira Gonçalves
Serviço de Gastrenterologia
Hospital de Braga
Sete Fontes - São Victor
4710-243 Braga, Portugal
e-mail: brunommgoncalves@gmail.com
Received: 12-04-2013
Accepted: 11-09-2013