Small intestine cancer diagnostic study of choice

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief:

Overview

Diagnostic Study of Choice

Study of choice

  • Biopsy is the gold standard test for the diagnosis of small intestine cancer.
  • Endoscopy and imaging tests can locate areas that have cancer, but the only way to confirm the diagnosis is to do a biopsy and histopathological analysis.
  • There are different ways to take biopsy samples of suspicious lesion.
  • There are numerous ways to take biopsy of small intestine:
    • Endoscopy: Endoscopy can be used to biopsy the lesions of proximal duodenum to the ligament of Treitz or in the terminal ileum. Push enteroscopes can reach the proximal jejunum, but not distal jejunum and ileum.
    • Laprotomy: is needed to biopsy a tumor in the intestines. This may be done if the tumor cannot be reached with an endoscope.
Diagnostic results

The following finding(s) on performing [investigation name] is(are) confirmatory for [disease name]:

  • [Finding 1]
  • [Finding 2]
Sequence of Diagnostic Studies

Various investigations can be performed when small intestinal cancers are suspected:

  • UGIS/SBFT are the most commonly used tests to examine the small bowel.[1]
  • Barium swallow and Barium enema are used to visualize the lesion of intestine but they are not very sensitive and accurate at detecting the small intestinal cancer until very advanced stage.
  • CT and CT enteroclysis are modern diagnostic tools used primarily for the detection and localization of small intestinal cancers.[2]
  • MR enteroclysis (MRE) is extensively used for the visualization of small intestinal cancer.[3]
  • Endoscopy and capsule enteroscopy are extremely useful modalities to visualize the small intestine and its pathologies.[4]

Name of Diagnostic Criteria

The American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) has designated staging by TNM classification to define small intestine cancer[5]:

Primary Tumor (T):

TX Primary tumor cannot be assessed
T0 No evidence of primary tumor
Tis Carcinoma in situ
T1a Tumor invades lamina propria
T1b Tumor invades submucosa
T2 Tumor invades muscularis propria
T3 Tumor invades through the muscularis propria into the subserosa or into the non-peritonealized perimuscular tissue (mesentery or retroperitoneum) with extension ≤2 cm
T4 Tumor perforates the visceral peritoneum or directly invades other organs or structures (includes other loops of small intestine, mesentery, or retroperitoneum >2 cm, and abdominal wall by way of serosa; for duodenum only, invasion of pancreas or bile duct)

Regional Lymph Nodes (N)

  • NX- Regional lymph nodes cannot be assessed
  • N0- No regional lymph node metastasis
  • N1- Metastasis in 1–3 regional lymph nodes
  • N2- Metastases in ≥4 regional lymph nodes

Distant Metastasis (M)

  • M0- No distant metastasis
  • M1- Distant metastasis

AJCC Stage Groupings

Stage T N M
0 Tis N0 M0
I T1 N0 M0
II T2 N0 M0
IIA T3 N0 M0
IIB T4 N0 M0
IIIA Any T N1 M0
IIIB Any T N2 M0
IV Any T Any N M1

References

  1. Ekberg O, Ekholm S (1980). "Radiography in primary tumors of the small bowel". Acta Radiol Diagn (Stockh). 21 (1): 79–84. PMID 7376936.
  2. Maglinte DD, Bender GN, Heitkamp DE, Lappas JC, Kelvin FM (March 2003). "Multidetector-row helical CT enteroclysis". Radiol. Clin. North Am. 41 (2): 249–62. PMID 12659337.
  3. Van Weyenberg SJ, Meijerink MR, Jacobs MA, Van der Peet DL, Van Kuijk C, Mulder CJ, Van Waesberghe JH (March 2010). "MR enteroclysis in the diagnosis of small-bowel neoplasms". Radiology. 254 (3): 765–73. doi:10.1148/radiol.09090828. PMID 20177091.
  4. Cheung DY, Choi MG (September 2011). "Current advance in small bowel tumors". Clin Endosc. 44 (1): 13–21. doi:10.5946/ce.2011.44.1.13. PMC 3363052. PMID 22741107.
  5. "Stage Information for Small Intestine Cancer".

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