The Prognostic Impact of Histology in Esophageal and Esophago-Gastric Junction Adenocarcinoma

Author:

Fiocca RobertoORCID,Mastracci LucaORCID,Lugaresi MarialuisaORCID,Grillo FedericaORCID,D’Errico Antonietta,Malvi Deborah,Spaggiari Paola,Tomezzoli Anna,Albarello Luca,Ristimäki AriORCID,Bottiglieri Luca,Bonora Elena,Krishnadath Kausilia K.,Raulli Gian Domenico,Rosati Riccardo,Fumagalli Romario Uberto,De Manzoni Giovanni,Räsänen Jari,Mattioli SandroORCID

Abstract

Stage significantly affects survival of esophageal and esophago-gastric junction adenocarcinomas (EA/EGJAs), however, limited evidence for the prognostic role of histologic subtypes is available. The aim of the study was to describe a morphologic approach to EA/EGJAs and assess its discriminating prognostic power. Histologic slides from 299 neoadjuvant treatment-naïve EA/EGJAs, resected in five European Centers, were retrospectively reviewed. Morphologic features were re-assessed and correlated with survival. In glandular adenocarcinomas (240/299 cases—80%), WHO grade and tumors with a poorly differentiated component ≥6% were the most discriminant factors for survival (both p < 0.0001), distinguishing glandular well-differentiated from poorly differentiated adenocarcinomas. Two prognostically different histologic groups were identified: the lower risk group, comprising glandular well-differentiated (34.4%) and rare variants, such as mucinous muconodular carcinoma (2.7%) and diffuse desmoplastic carcinoma (1.7%), versus the higher risk group, comprising the glandular poorly differentiated subtype (45.8%), including invasive mucinous carcinoma (5.7%), diffuse anaplastic carcinoma (3%), mixed carcinoma (6.7%) (CSS p < 0.0001, DFS p = 0.001). Stage (p < 0.0001), histologic groups (p = 0.001), age >72 years (p = 0.008), and vascular invasion (p = 0.015) were prognostically significant in the multivariate analysis. The combined evaluation of stage/histologic group identified 5-year cancer-specific survival ranging from 87.6% (stage II, lower risk) to 14% (stage IVA, higher risk). Detailed characterization of histologic subtypes contributes to EA/EGJA prognostic prediction.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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