Barrett’s esophagus is the precursor of all esophageal adenocarcinomas

Author:

Curtius KitORCID,Rubenstein Joel H.,Chak Amitabh,Inadomi John M.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveBarrett’s esophagus (BE) is a known precursor to esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC) but current clinical data have not been consolidated to address whether BE is the origin of all incident EAC, which would reinforce evidence for BE screening efforts. We aimed to answer whether all expected prevalent BE, diagnosed and undiagnosed, could account for all incident EACs in the US cancer registry data.DesignWe used a multi-scale computational model of EAC that includes the evolutionary process from normal esophagus through BE in individuals from the US population. The model was previously calibrated to fit SEER cancer incidence curves. Here we also utilized age- and sex-specific US census data for numbers at-risk. The primary outcome for model validation was the expected number of EAC cases for a given calendar year. Secondary outcomes included the comparisons of resulting model-predicted prevalence of BE and BE-to-EAC progression to the observed prevalence and progression rates.ResultsThe model estimated the total number of EAC cases in 2010 was 9,970 (95% CI 9,140 – 11,980), which recapitulates all EAC cases from population data. The model simultaneously predicted 8-9% BE prevalence in high-risk males age 45-55, and 0.1-0.2% non-dysplastic BE-to-EAC annual progression in males, consistent with clinical studies.ConclusionThere are no additional EAC cases that plausibly arise in the US population outside the BE pathway. Effective screening of high-risk patients could capture the majority of population destined for EAC progression and decrease mortality through early detection and curative removal of small (pre)cancers during surveillance.Summary BoxWhat is already known about this subject?Barrett’s esophagus (BE) patients have a 40 to 50-fold higher risk of developing esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC) than the general population yet many remain undiagnosed.Identified BE patients receiving surveillance can have early cancers discovered endoscopically, which decreases the high overall EAC-associated mortality.Currently around 90% of patients who develop EAC were never part of a BE surveillance program, and those BE patients on surveillance have a low annual progression rate of 0.1 - 0.3% to develop EAC.What are the new findings?By applying a model that incorporates the evolution from normal cells to BE to EAC in patients, we found that the numbers add up - the expected number of EAC cases in the US population are explained by the published rates of BE described above.We cohesively examined the published estimates to determine that all EAC likely arises from both identified BE and occult, undiagnosed BE in the population.How might it impact on clinical practice in the foreseeable future?Based on current best estimates, our findings suggest there is no public health need to seek cases of a non-BE alternative pathway to EAC.Increasing efforts for effective, sensitive screening and surveillance of the true BE population will decrease EAC mortality in the coming years.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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