Abstract: | Direct-vision endoscopic cytologies and biopsies were performed on 1,437 patients during a five-year period, and the incidence, correct typing and diagnosis of gastroesophageal cancer were studied. At the first cytology, malignant cells were diagnosed in 80 cases, all of which were confirmed by the endoscopic biopsy; in 30 cases, despite suspicious cytology, no malignancy was seen at the first biopsy. At repeat endoscopic cytology and biopsy, however, 21 of these 30 cases were correctly correlated for malignancy, resulting in a final correct correlation in 101 of the 110 cases (91.8%) and a diagnostic discrepancy in 9 cases (8.2%). It thus appears that the procedure is useful in diagnosing gastroesophageal cancer in the majority of cases. In the cases of discrepancies, gastric ulcers were found later; the repeatedly suspicious cytologies were due to the cytologic atypia of the cells from regenerating hyperplastic and/or metaplastic epithelium at the margins of the ulcers. Such cells showed a wide spectrum of changes, ranging from mild atypia to severe atypia mimicking adenocarcinoma of the upper gastrointestinal tract. |