Barrett's oesophagus Flashcards
Define Barrett’s oesophagus.
Change in the normal squamous epithelium of the oesophagus to specialised intestinal metaplasia.
Associated with GORD, even if reflux is asymptomatic. Histology will show columnar-lined epithelium with or without intestinal metaplasia and with goblet cells.
What is the main concern with Barrett’s oesophagus?
Main concern is progression to adenocarcinoma of the oesophagus.
How common is Barrett’s?
- Affects 0.5-2% of the population, increasing incidence
- In people with reflux - 8% have Barrett’s
- In asymptomatic individuals - 6% have Barrett’s
- 25% are <50years old
What are the risk factors for Barrett’s?
- Acid/bile reflux or GORD
- Increased age
- White ethnicity
- Male sex
- FH of Barrett’s oesophagus/oesophageal adenocarcinoma
- Obesity
- Smoking
What is the difference between metaplasia and dysplasia in Barrett’s?
(1) Metaplasia = not pre-malignant because reversible
(2) Dysplasia = changes showing some of the cytological + histological features of malignancy but with no invasion through the BM
- Low grade
- High grade
What are the types of Barrett’s oesophagus?
Squamous → Columnar METAPLASIA
- Without goblet cells: gastric metaplasia
- With goblet cells: intestinal type metaplasia
What is the typical presentation of Barrett’s?
- Presence of risk factors
- Heartburn
- Regurgitation
- Dysphagia
- Belching (burping)
- Burning on swallowing hot drinks/alcohol
Other:
- Chest pain
- Laryngitis
- Cough
- Dyspnoea/wheezing
- History of aspiration pneumonia
What are the signs of Barrett’s on examination?
- Normal or
- Wheeze on auscultation
- Epigastric pain
What investigation would you do for Barrett’s oesophagus?
- OGD with biopsy - abnormal epithelium characteristic of Barrett’s oesophagus. Reveals columnar-lined epithelium with goblet cells, with or without dysplasia.
- Barium oesophagogram - identifies hiatal hernia and reflux
What else should be recorded during endoscopy and what is the classification for Barrett’s?
Length of Barrett’s (short if <3cm) and dysplasia degree
Prague C&M classification - reproducible description of the extent of Barrett’s. Uses assessment of the circumferential (C) and maximal (M) extent of the endoscopically visualised segment of Barrett’s
How do you manage Barrett’s?
Non-dysplastic:
Monitoring - every 5yrs if <3cm, every 5yrs if _>_3cm
Medical - PPI plus surveillance at least every 2 years.
Dysplastic:
Low grade:
- Surveillance 6monthly then less frequent
- Endoscopic eradication
High grade: 20-40% risk of harbouring adenocarcinoma
- Endoscopic eradication or mucosal dissection for complete resection
- Radiofrequency ablation
- Surveillance after treatment
What are the complications of Barrett’s?
- Dysplasia and adenocarcinoma
- Oesophageal stricture
- Low QOL- depression, anxiety, stress
What is the prognosis in Barrett’s?
Prognosis:
- Good with surveillance (every 5 years if non-dysplastic). 5 year survival with detected adenocarcinoma is >85%.
- PPIs do not cause regression of Barrett’s even with aggressive acid suppression but only ~0.4% progress to adenocarcinoma.
- Anti reflux surgery can cause regression of Barrett’s in 25% and lowers the risk of progression to adenocarcinoma.