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Restoration of the normal squamous lining in Barrett's esophagus by argon beam plasma coagulation

Restoration of the normal squamous lining in Barrett's esophagus by argon beam plasma coagulation
Restoration of the normal squamous lining in Barrett's esophagus by argon beam plasma coagulation
Objective: 
Barrett's esophagus is associated with significantly increased risk of development of esophageal adenocarcinoma. Replacing columnar epithelium with the normal squamous lining in this condition offers the possibility of decreasing the risk of degeneration to invasive adenocarcinoma. This study aimed to establish the feasibility of argon beam plasma coagulation (ABPC), in conjunction with control of gastroesophageal reflux, to restore the squamous lining.

Methods: 
Thirty patients with Barrett's esophagus (four low-grade dysplasia, three high-grade) were recruited from our surveillance program, and underwent endoscopic ABPC.

Results: 
Twenty-seven patients completed treatment, with macroscopic replacement of their columnar lining by squamous epithelium, histologically confirmed in all 27, and followed up for a median of 9 months (range, 6–18 months). Two patterns of squamous replacement were identified: 70% of patients showed squamous epithelium with no persistent intestinal metaplasia, and in 30% the new squamous epithelium covered areas of underlying intestinal metaplasia. One patient has withdrawn from the study. Two esophageal perforations, with one death, occurred early in the study.

Conclusion: 
ABPC, in conjunction with control of gastroesophageal reflux, allows squamous regrowth in both benign and dysplastic Barrett's esophagus. Despite the theoretical safety advantages of ABPC over techniques such as laser, esophageal perforation may occur with this technique. It is too soon to recommend ABPC for dysplastic or nondysplastic Barrett's because follow-up is too short to show a decreased incidence of and mortality from adenocarcinoma.
1910-1815
Byrne, James
e3d5b8fe-1b69-441c-a173-e084fe5372a6
Armstrong, Gordon R
2cf55989-6eae-4e49-8b55-e65e0a99714c
Attwood, Stephen
5ea8ff54-04c5-4cbf-a718-90742922b665
Byrne, James
e3d5b8fe-1b69-441c-a173-e084fe5372a6
Armstrong, Gordon R
2cf55989-6eae-4e49-8b55-e65e0a99714c
Attwood, Stephen
5ea8ff54-04c5-4cbf-a718-90742922b665

Byrne, James, Armstrong, Gordon R and Attwood, Stephen (1998) Restoration of the normal squamous lining in Barrett's esophagus by argon beam plasma coagulation. The American journal of gastroenterology, 93 (10), 1910-1815. (doi:10.1111/j.1572-0241.1998.525_b.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: 
Barrett's esophagus is associated with significantly increased risk of development of esophageal adenocarcinoma. Replacing columnar epithelium with the normal squamous lining in this condition offers the possibility of decreasing the risk of degeneration to invasive adenocarcinoma. This study aimed to establish the feasibility of argon beam plasma coagulation (ABPC), in conjunction with control of gastroesophageal reflux, to restore the squamous lining.

Methods: 
Thirty patients with Barrett's esophagus (four low-grade dysplasia, three high-grade) were recruited from our surveillance program, and underwent endoscopic ABPC.

Results: 
Twenty-seven patients completed treatment, with macroscopic replacement of their columnar lining by squamous epithelium, histologically confirmed in all 27, and followed up for a median of 9 months (range, 6–18 months). Two patterns of squamous replacement were identified: 70% of patients showed squamous epithelium with no persistent intestinal metaplasia, and in 30% the new squamous epithelium covered areas of underlying intestinal metaplasia. One patient has withdrawn from the study. Two esophageal perforations, with one death, occurred early in the study.

Conclusion: 
ABPC, in conjunction with control of gastroesophageal reflux, allows squamous regrowth in both benign and dysplastic Barrett's esophagus. Despite the theoretical safety advantages of ABPC over techniques such as laser, esophageal perforation may occur with this technique. It is too soon to recommend ABPC for dysplastic or nondysplastic Barrett's because follow-up is too short to show a decreased incidence of and mortality from adenocarcinoma.

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Published date: 1998

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 473395
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/473395
PURE UUID: ba6e928c-f66b-4da1-b3f4-b434ba6a1312

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Date deposited: 17 Jan 2023 17:40
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 00:13

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Contributors

Author: James Byrne
Author: Gordon R Armstrong
Author: Stephen Attwood

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