Oesopahgeal tumours are classified into
- epithelial tumours - include papilloma, intraepithelial neoplasia, carcinoma and carcinoid tumours
- non epithelial tumours - leiomyoma, lipoma, gastrointestinal (1)
Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is the predominant histological subtype and is mainly found in the upper two thirds of the oesophagus.
- is thought to develop from squamous dysplasia/intraepithelial neoplasia.
- dysplastic squamous epithelium is characterised by cytologic and architectural abnormalities
- these lesions are usually confined to the epithelium
- invasion of these neoplastic squamous cells into lamina propria and deeper layers results in invasive oesophageal SCC (2,3)
Adenocarcinoma usually arises in a region of specialised columnar epithelium (SCE) metaplasia in the lower third of the oesophagus.
- there is glandular differentiation that arises in the setting of Barrett’s oesophagus (BE)
- rarely may arise from heterotrophic gastric tissue or the submucosal glands with a similar morphology to Barrett’s associated tumours (2,3)
Dissemination of the tumour may occur in three ways:
- direct spread - occurs both laterally, through the component layers of the oesophageal wall, and longitudinally within the oesophageal wall
- via lymphatics - occurs commonly
- haematogenous spread - spread may involve a variety of different organs including the liver, lungs, brain and bones (3)
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