Esophageal Metastases and Lymphoma

 Dysphagia, weight loss, hematemesis, or asymptomatic



• Esophageal metastases
image Direct, lymphatic, or hematogenous spread

image Direct invasion most common route: Gastric and lung cancer most common primary tumors

• Complications
image GI bleeding, perforation, obstruction

• Treatment
image Chemotherapy; radiation therapy

image Surgical resection of complicating lesions (obstruction, upper GI bleed)

image Endoluminal stent for obstructing lesions

• Prognosis
image Usually poor




DIAGNOSTIC CHECKLIST




• Check for history of primary extraesophageal cancer; biopsy required

• Overlapping radiographic features of esophageal metastases, lymphoma, and primary carcinoma

image
(Left) In this 60-year-old woman with lung cancer and progressive dysphagia, 2 views from an esophagram show extrinsic or intramural narrowing of the mid esophagus image, but intact mucosal folds, representing invasion by her lung cancer.


image
(Right) Esophagram in a man with known lung cancer and dysphagia shows a broad shelf-like indentation image along the anterior wall of the mid esophagus.

image
(Left) In this 62-year-old man, a spot film of the distal esophagus shows a distal stricture and mucosal irregularity image that mimics primary esophageal cancer. However, other views (not shown) showed nodular thickened folds in the gastric fundus.


image
(Right) CT in the same patient shows a mass image within the wall of the fundus with extension into the perigastric tissues and nodes. Endoscopy confirmed a primary gastric carcinoma.


TERMINOLOGY


Definitions




• Metastases from primary cancer of other sites

• Lymphoma: Malignant tumor of lymphocytes


IMAGING


General Features




• Best diagnostic clue
image From gastric cancer: Ulcerated/polypoid mass of gastric cardia extending into distal esophagus

image From lung cancer: Extrinsic indentation of upper esophagus from primary cancer or malignant adenopathy


Radiographic Findings




• Fluoroscopic-guided double-contrast barium study
image Direct invasion, gastric carcinoma: Distal esophagus
– Ulcerated/polypoid mass of cardia/fundus

– Irregular or smooth, tapered narrowing of distal esophagus ± discrete mass

image Direct invasion of cancer of larynx, pharynx, thyroid, lung: Cervical or thoracic esophagus
– Smooth or slightly irregular esophageal wall, soft tissue mass in adjacent neck/mediastinum

– Serrated, scalloped, or nodular esophageal wall → narrowing/obstruction

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Nov 16, 2016 | Posted by in GASTROINTESTINAL IMAGING | Comments Off on Esophageal Metastases and Lymphoma

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