Background Oncological principles favour en bloc R0 excision for curative endoscopic resection. In Barrett's neoplasia, endoscopically curable cancers include T1a and selected early T1b disease.
Although endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR) and endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) are established treatments, optimal lesion selection remains debated. Objective To evaluate the oncological impact of two selective resection strategies: (1) prioritising ESD for suspected Barrett's cancers >15 mm and (2) a historical approach reserving ESD mainly for advanced cancers.
Design Multicentre retrospective observational study comparing an ESD-first strategy (period 2, 2017 - 2024) with a historical selective ESD approach (period 1, 2004 - 2016). Lesion allocation was based on endoscopic assessment of invasion in both periods.
Outcomes included basal R0 resection, curative resection, recurrence and adverse events. Results A total of 581 resections were performed in 542 patients (median lesion size 20 mm).
Cancer was present in 271 cases (178 T1a and 93 T1b). Period 2 had a higher cancer burden (52.3% vs 34.9%) and greater ESD use (77.1% vs 21.2%).
Gut (BMJ) published a clinical update in Research Highlights on 06 Mar 2026.
The item focuses on Oncological impact of universal endoscopic submucosal dissection for large Barretts cancers.
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