The document summarizes staging for carcinoma of the esophagus. Accurate staging is important for prognosis and treatment planning. The TNM system classifies tumors by size (T), lymph node involvement (N), and distant metastasis (M). Endoscopic ultrasound is the most accurate method for determining tumor depth and local lymph node involvement. Positron emission tomography and integrated PET/CT are useful for detecting distant metastases. Together these investigations provide accurate clinical staging to guide management decisions.
2. The prognosis of esophageal cancer is strongly
associated with its stage.
Accurate clinical staging is critical for estimating
prognosis and selecting the appropriate
treatment strategy
3. TNM Staging
T: PRIMARY TUMOR
• T 0 No evidence of a primary tumor **
• T is Carcinoma in situ (high-grade dysplasia)
• T 1 Tumor invading the lamina propria, muscularis mucosae
(1a), or submucosa (1b) but not breaching the boundary
between submucosa and muscularis propria
• T 2 Tumor invading muscularis propria but not breaching the
boundary between muscularis propria and periesophageal
tissue
• T 3 Tumor invading periesophageal tissue but not adjacent
structures
• T 4 Tumor invading adjacent structures
4. TNM Staging
N: REGIONAL LYMPH NODES
N 0 No regional lymph node metastasis
N 1 Regional lymph node metastasis
M: DISTANT METASTASIS
M 0 No distant metastasis
M 1 Distant metastasis
5. Figure 1. Drawing illustrates the AJCC divisions (left) and clinical divisions (right) of the
esophagus.
Kim T J et al. Radiographics 2009;29:403-421
6. TNM Staging
A major change between the 2002 and the 2010
editions was the development of separate stage
groupings according to histology
Rice TW, Rusch VW, Ishwaran H, et al. Cancer of the esophagus and
esophagogastric junction: data-driven staging for the seventh
edition of the American Joint Committee on Cancer/International
Union Against Cancer Cancer Staging Manuals. Cancer 2010;
116:3763
7. Other major differences
A simplification of tumor location and inclusion of
tumors at the esophagogastric junction and proximal 5
cm of the stomach that extend into the EGJ or
esophagus as esophageal cancers (the so-called Siewert
III EGJ tumors. All other tumors with an epicenter in
the stomach >5 cm from the EGJ, or those within 5 cm
or the EGJ without extension into the esophagus are
staged as gastric cancers
Rüdiger Siewert J, Feith M, Werner M, Stein HJ. Adenocarcinoma of the
esophagogastric junction: results of surgical therapy based on
anatomical/topographic classification in 1,002 consecutive patients. Ann Surg
2000; 232:353.
9. Redefinition of Tis as high-grade dysplasia,
which includes all noninvasive neoplastic
epithelia that was formerly called "carcinoma in
situ", a diagnosis that is no longer used for
columnar mucosa anywhere in the GI tract
10. Subclassification of T4 disease based upon
potential resectability of adjacent involved
organs/structures
T4 Tumor invades adjacent structures
T4a -- Resectable tumor invading pleura,
pericardium, or diaphragm
T4b -- Unresectable tumor invading other adjacent
structures, such as aorta, vertebral body, trachea, etc.
11. Subclassification of nodal (N) status according to
the number of regional nodes containing
metastases
NX -- Regional lymph node(s) cannot be assessed
N0 -- No regional lymph node metastasis
N1 -- Metastasis in 1-2 regional lymph nodes
N2 -- Metastasis in 3-6 regional lymph nodes
N3 -- Metastasis in seven or more regional lymph
nodes
12. The regional nodes
Intrathoracic esophagus tumors included the upper
periesophageal (above the azygos vein), subcarinal,
and lower periesophageal (below the azygos vein)
sites
Abdominal esophagus were lower esophageal,
diaphragmatic, pericardial, left gastric, and celiac.
Involvement of more distant lymph nodes (eg,
cervical or celiac axis nodes for intrathoracic
tumors) had been considered distant metastasis (M1
disease)
13. Histologic grade
Reassignment of stage groupings using T, N, M
categories as well as histologic grade of
differentiation (G), and for SCCs, tumor location
GX -- Grade cannot be assessed - stage grouping
as G1
G1 -- Well differentiated
G2 -- Moderately differentiated
G3 -- Poorly differentiated
G4 -- Undifferentiated - stage grouping as G3
squamous
16. Investigation for staging
CT scanning
Percutaneous ultrasound of the cervical lymph
nodes with or without fine-needle aspiration
(FNA) cytology
Endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) with or without
FNA
2-[18F] fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG)
positron emission tomography (PET) scanning
Laparoscopy and/or thoracoscopy.
17. CT scan
To detect distant disease
Limited value for locoregional tumor staging
Limited sensitivity for small metastases
Role for Nodal involvement ???
18. Endoscopic Ultrasound
Method of choice to determine depth of tumor
invasion and regional nodal disease and
involvement of adjacent structures, with an
overall accuracy to 92%
Better regional TNM tumor staging than CT,
MRI, or PET scanning, particularly in detecting
lymph node involvement
22. PET scans
PET for the detection of metastatic disease
makes it potentially the most cost-effective
method of identifying patients with occult
metastases, for whom curative therapy should
not be pursued