Benign oesophageal tumours
Appearance
Pathophysiology
[edit | edit source]- Benign tumours more commonly occur in submucosa and muscularis propria than in the mucosa
Mucosal tumours
[edit | edit source]Granular cell tumours
[edit | edit source]- Found in skin, respiratory tract, GIT, breast, tongue
- 11% of patients have multiple tumours
- Derive from Schwann cells (nerve sheath origin)
- Can also occur in submucosa
- Distal third of oesophagus is most common location in GIT
- Sessile or bulging whitish-grey lesions with often normal-appearing mucosa
- Standard biopsies often non-diagnostic due to overlying epithelium. Tunnelled biopsies reveal eosinophilic granules.
- 98-99% are benign
- Indications for excision: atypical features on EUS, size >2cm, presence of symptoms
- Generally excise endoscopically
Fibrovascular polyps
[edit | edit source]- Mostly found in cervical oesophagus at or near the cricopharyngeus
- Cylindrical or elongated, with a stalk
- Symptoms are rare
- Can resect endoscopically if needed
Squamous papillomas
[edit | edit source]- Most often found in distal oesophagus
- Usually associated with underlying inflammation, and possibly HPV
- Colourless, exophytic, wart-like projections
- Often seen with a crossing vessel on the surface
- Excise completely to rule out carcinoma
Submucosal tumours
[edit | edit source]Lipoma
[edit | edit source]- Homogenous, hyperechoic, smooth appearance on EUS
- Symptoms rare
- Resection seldom needed
Haemangioma
[edit | edit source]- Purple or reddish nodule
- EUS - smooth, hypoechoic, submucosal mass
- Mostly asymptomatic
- Can cause dysphagia or bleeding
- If symptomatic, can be treated endoscopically
Neural tumour
[edit | edit source]- Neurofibroma, schwannoma
- Rare in oesophagus
- Commonly seen in upper oesophagus
- Yellow-white-tan rubbery lesions with glistening smooth surface
- Majority benign, but can transform into malignant schwannoma
- Symptomatic tumours can be enucleated endoscopically
- Large tumours may require oesophagectomy
Muscularis propria tumours
[edit | edit source]Leiomyoma
[edit | edit source]- Most common benign tumour of oesophagus
- Arises from muscularis propria, although very rarely can arise from muscularis mucosae
- 2:1 male predominance
- Usually asymptomatic
- Usually found in mid to distal oesophagus - more smooth muscle there
- Round protrusion into the lumen of the oesophagus with smooth, normal mucosa
- EUS - hypoechoic, regular borders, arise from the fourth endosonographic layer
- Small asymptomatic suspected leiomyoma can be observed without biopsy
- Don't biopsy if suspected based on EUS - will complicate attempts to enucleate subsequently, by scarring up the layers
- Symptomatic lesions can be enucleated
- Larger lesions can be removed via VATS or endoscopically - endoscopic resection with creation of a submucosal tunnel for leiomyomas up to 5.5cm
Presentation
[edit | edit source]- Mostly asymptomatic
Investigation
[edit | edit source]- Barium swallow - smooth defect in the lumen
- Gastroscopy
- CT
Differential diagnosis (see 'oesophageal cancer' topic)
[edit | edit source]- Leiomyosarcoma
- GIST