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Endoscopic Ultrasound in Rectal Cancer Natasha Schneider November 15, 2010 Rectal Cancer 41,000 new cases diagnosed/year Estimated 8,500 deaths Prognosis and management is dependent upon stage at time of presentation Staging allows for identification of patients in need of neoadjuvant chemotherapy Recommended for pts with advanced loco-regional rectal cancer (T3, T4 N0, TxN1, N2) Staging T1-invades submucosa T2-invades muscularis propria T3-through muscularis propria into subserosa T4-into other organs or structures Stage: 0: Tis N0 M0 1: T1-2 N0 M0 2: T3-4 N0 M0 3A: T1-4 N1-2 M0 4: Any T Any N M1 Staging Rectal Cancer Prognosis of rectal cancer closely related to Depth of tumoral invasion Number of metastatic LNs Involvement of the circumferential margin Assessment of cancer invasion through the bowel wall (T stage) remains the primary and most important factor in treatment LAR APR 5 yr survival Stage 1: 85-90% Stage 2: 60-65% Stage 3: 30-40% Stage 4: 8-9% Modalities for preoperative staging CT MRI ERUS Rigid probe Flexible probes PET +/- CT Siddiqui et al International Sem Surg Onc 2006 Endorectal sonography (ERUS) Introduced in 1983 Hildebrant and Feifel introduced ERUS in 1985 as means of staging rectal carcinoma Technique Preferable to have empty rectum as fecal material can distort images Laxative enema Standard colonoscopy prep Well tolerated Often can be performed without sedation Hyperechoic mucosa Hypoechoic muscularis mucosa Hyperechoic submucosa Hypoechoic muscularis propria Hyperechoic serosa Indication for EUS rectal cancer Savides and Master GIE 2002 42 Studies T1 Pooled sensitivity – 87.8% (95% CI 85.3-90) Pooled specificity – 98.3% (95% CI 97.8-98.7) Only included those with surgical histology confirmation T2 T2 Pooled sensitivity – 80.5% (95% CI 77.9-82.9) Pooled specificity – 95.6% (95% CI 94.9-96.3) T3 T3 Pooled sensitivity – 96.4% (95% CI 95.4-97.2) Pooled specificity – 90.6% (95% CI 89.5-91.7) T4 T4 Pooled sensitivity – 95.4% (95% CI 92.4-97.5) Pooled specificity – 98.3% (95% CI 97.8-98.7) EUS Staging 42 studies included EUS Staging EUS Several studies suggest better than CT or MRI for T staging In a cohort of 80 patients with new nonmets rectal cancer: EUS changed management in 1/3 pts, mostly b/c CT tended to underestimate T stage • EUS correctly identified 62% pts with T3/4 disease missed by CT resulting in neoadjuvant therapy for people who would have otherwise missed this tx • No pts were overstaged Harewood, Wiersema, et al. A prospective, blinded assessment of impact of preoperative staging on the management of rectal cancer. Gastroenterology 2002;123:24. EUS Issues Biggest problem seems to be overstaging T2 tumors Could be secondary to inflammatory infiltrate –resolution Operator experience Level of tumor Understaging Reduced accuracy for lower tumors Up to 17% cannot be staged secondary to inability to traverse Schwartz DA, Harewood GC, Wiersema MJ. EUS for rectal disease. Gastroint Endosc 2002;56:100. • 35 studies included • Reported accuracy of CT 55-65% and MRI 60-65% • Only modest +LR but low –LR (which is what you want) • So better used to exclude Nodal disease rather than confirm invasion Nodal disease Less accurate in diagnosing this Studies report similar to CT and MRI (60-80%) Adding FNA-some studies show improved accuracy, while others did not Metastatic LN: hypoechoic appearance, round shape, and a reduced sonar attenuation coefficient Size: > 0.5 cm: 50% to 70% chance cancer <0.4 mm: <20% Schwartz DA, Harewood GC, Wiersema MJ. EUS for rectal disease. Gastroint Endosc 2002;56:100. Recurrence Rectal EUS superior to pelvic CT in detecting recurrence (sensitivity 100% vs. 85%) Performance affected by postop chemo/XRT inflammation/changes Improved performance with EUS-FNA In a study of 312 patients, for example, FNA significantly improved accuracy compared to EUS alone (92 versus 75 percent) • The superior accuracy was primarily reflected in better specificity (93 versus 57 percent for CT) Similar results from another study of 116 patients • biggest advantage of EUS FNA was the ability to detect very small pararectal recurrences (the smallest tumor being 3 mm) allowing for potentially curative resection Hunerbien et al. The role of TESU guided biopsy in the postoperative follow up of patients with rectal cancer. Surgery 2001;129:64 Lohnert et al. Effectiveness of endoluminal sonography in identification of occult local rectal cancer recurrances. Dis Colon Rectum 2000;43:483 Recurrance No consensus of timing of follow up studies currently In previous study, done every 3 mon for 2 yrs One author suggested reasonable approach to do aggressive surveillance on patients with locally advanced tumors and in those who had local excision (ie transanal) as these would have the highest risk recurrence Savides and Master GIE 2002 Siddiqui et al International Sem Surg Onc 2006 Savides and Master GIE 2002 Siddiqui et al International Sem Surg Onc 2006 Savides and Master GIE 2002 Giovannini and Ardizzone Best Prac Res Clin Gastro 2006 Siddiqui et al International Sem Surg Onc 2006 Cases Liz – 29628492 Eric - 32007213 Pat - 30920839 (T3 lesion) 31932858 (both of these are large, noninvasive polyps—may be interesting to show) 30924781 22012876 (large rectal GIST—would definitely show this case) uT1 – does not penetrate muscularis propria uT2 – penetrates muscularis propria uT3 – proceeds beyond muscularis propria, infiltrating perirectal fat uT4 – infiltrate surrounding organs Sonographic criteria for involved LNs Size > 5 mm Mixed signal intensity Irregular margins Spherical rather than ovoid of flat shape