Predicting Regression of Barrett's Esophagus-Can All the King's Men Put It Together Again?
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-20-2024
Publication Title
Biomolecules
Abstract
The primary pre-neoplastic lesion of the lower esophagus in the vicinity of the gastroesophageal junction (GEJ) is any Barrett's esophageal lesions (BE), and esophageal neoplasia has increased in the US population with predispositions (Caucasian males, truncal obesity, age, and GERD). The responses to BE are endoscopic and screening cytologic programs with endoscopic ablation of various forms. The former have not been proven to be cost-effective and there are mixed results for eradication. A fresh approach is sorely needed. We prospectively followed 2229 mostly male veterans at high risk for colorectal cancer in a 27-year longitudinal long-term study, collecting data on colorectal neoplasia development and other preneoplastic lesions, including BE and spontaneous regression (SR). Another cross-sectional BE study at a similar time period investigated antigenic changes at the GEJ in both BE glandular and squamous mucosa immunohistochemistry and the role of inflammation. Ten of the prospective cohort (21.7%) experienced SR out of a total of forty-six BE patients. Significant differences between SR and stable BE were younger age (
Volume
14
Issue
9
First Page
1182
Recommended Citation
Tobi M, Khoury N, Al-Subee O, Sethi S, Talwar H, Kam M, et al. Predicting regression of Barrett's esophagus-can all the king's men put it together again? Biomolecules. 2024 Sep 20;14(9):1182. doi: 10.3390/biom14091182. PMID: 39334948.
DOI
10.3390/biom14091182
ISSN
2218-273X
PubMed ID
39334948