6533b857fe1ef96bd12b4ea0
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Successful Endoscopic Resection of an Esophageal Metastasis from a Preceding Squamous-Cell Tonsillar Carcinoma
T. RabensteinC. JaegerLiebwin GossnerM SchroederManfred StolteCh. EllAndrea Maysubject
Malemedicine.medical_specialtyTonsillar CarcinomaEsophageal Neoplasmsmedicine.medical_treatmentTonsillar NeoplasmsMetastasisTonsillar Neoplasmstomatognathic systemSubmucosaCarcinomaHumansMedicineEsophagusbusiness.industryGastroenterologyMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseSurgeryEsophagectomymedicine.anatomical_structureEpidermoid carcinomaEsophagectomyCarcinoma Squamous CellEsophagoscopybusinessFollow-Up Studiesdescription
This report describes the case of a 62-year-old man with tonsillar carcinoma who had undergone esophagectomy due to an esophageal metastasis. Subsequently, a second metastasis occurred in the residual esophagus, and he presented for evaluation for local endoscopic therapy. The initial upper endoscopy revealed a type IIa - c lesion at 21 cm from the incisors, within a segment suspicious for Barrett's mucosa. As part of the complex treatment approach in this patient, endoscopic resection of the lesion was carried out using the suck-and-cut technique with ligation. Histology showed that the lesion was a metastasis from a squamous-cell carcinoma, with focal infiltration of the upper submucosal layer and vascular invasion consistent with the hypothesis of hematogenous spread from the preceding tonsillar carcinoma. The resection margins were tumor-free. At the time of writing, the patient had been recurrence-free for more than 9 months. In summary, the present paper describes a unique case of successful endoscopic resection of an esophageal metastasis associated with an antecedent tonsillar carcinoma.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2005-10-01 | Endoscopy |