Foregut NET
Appearance
Also known as carcinoid tumours
See separate topic under 'small bowel' - 'midgut NETs'
Epidemiology
[edit | edit source]- Increasing incidence in stomach - thought to be due to increasing surveillance and widespread use of PPIs
Pathophysiology
[edit | edit source]- Arise from neuroendocrine precursor cells (enterochromaffin cells)
- Can manifest at any site in the body
- GIT sites:
- Stomach (8% of all NETs)
- Small intestine
- Rectum
- Appendix
- Typically non-functioning in the stomach and rarely cause carcinoid syndrome
- Classification:
- Classification based on morphology alone is not very useful, because it does not accurately predict clinical course. Need to use mitotic rate and Ki67 index. The distinction between a G3 NET and a carcinoma can be difficult.
Classification
[edit | edit source]- Three distinct subtypes of gastric NETs
| Type 1 - complication of atrophic gastritis | Type 2 - complication of ZES | Type 3 - sporadic | Type 4 (Neuroendocrine carcinoma) | |
| Proportion of gastric NETs | 70-80% | 5-10% | 10-15% | |
| NET characteristics | Usually non-functioning | Usually non-functioning | ||
| Associated pathology | ECL cells transform into NETs in setting of chronic achlorhydria and subsequent high gastrin levels. Can occur with atrophic gastritis, pernicious anaemia, prolonged PPI use. | ECL cells transform into NETs in setting of hypergastrinaemia, but this time it is caused by gastrinomas in pancreas or duodenum. Often seen with ZES and MEN1. | None - sporadic tumours. Absence of atrophic gastritis, ZES or MEN1. | |
| Location | Multiple small tumours (<1cm) confined to mucosa or submucosa in fundus or body.
Tumours usually appear as polypoid lesions with a small central ulceration. |
Multiple small tumours in fundus, antrum and body | Large solitary lesions in fundus or antrum | |
| Gastric acid level | Low | High | Normal | |
| Serum gastrin level | High (because of atrophic gastritis) | High (because of ZES) | Normal | |
| Treatment | EMR if <1-2cm
|
EMR if <1-2cm
|
Partial or total gastrectomy with local lymph node resection | Aim for curative resection, but rarely possible
|
| Prognosis | Excellent | Good (long-term survival 70-90%, but can metastasise to regional nodes) | Poor (5 year survival 25-30%) | Poor - most patients present with widespread mets. Very aggressive. |
Staging
[edit | edit source]- See 'pancreatic NETs' topic
Staging duodenal/ampulla of Vater NENs
| Primary tumor (T) | |||
| T category | T criteria | ||
| TX | Primary tumor cannot be assessed | ||
| T1 | Tumor invades the mucosa or submucosa only and is ≤1 cm (duodenal tumors).
Tumor ≤1 cm and confined within the sphincter of Oddi (ampullary tumors). |
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| T2 | Tumor invades the muscularis propria or is >1 cm (duodenal).
Tumor invades through sphincter into duodenal submucosa or muscularis propria, or is >1 cm (ampullary). |
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| T3 | Tumor invades the pancreas or peripancreatic adipose tissue | ||
| T4 | Tumor invades the visceral peritoneum (serosa) or other organs | ||
NOTE: Multiple tumors should be designated as such (and the largest tumor should be used to assign the T category):
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| Regional lymph nodes (N) | |||
| N category | N criteria | ||
| NX | Regional lymph nodes cannot be assessed | ||
| N0 | No regional lymph node involvement | ||
| N1 | Regional lymph node involvement | ||
| Distant metastasis (M) | |||
| M category | M criteria | ||
| M0 | No distant metastasis | ||
| M1 | Distant metastases | ||
| M1a | Metastasis confined to liver | ||
| M1b | Metastases in at least one extrahepatic site (eg, lung, ovary, nonregional lymph node, peritoneum, bone) | ||
| M1c | Both hepatic and extrahepatic metastases | ||
| Prognostic stage groups | |||
| When T is... | And N is... | And M is... | Then the stage group is... |
| T1 | N0 | M0 | I |
| T2 | N0 | M0 | II |
| T3 | N0 | M0 | II |
| T4 | N0 | M0 | III |
| Any T | N1 | M0 | III |
| Any T | Any N | M1 | IV |
Workup
[edit | edit source]- Gastroscopy
- EUS can help establish depth of lesion
- CT
- Bright enhancement on CT on arterial phase, mets will also be hyperenhancing
- PET
- Avid on DOTATATE-PET or octreotide scan
- Chromogranin A is often elevated - useful as biomarker