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Digestive
specialists freeze out Esophagus Cancer with
new therapy
Newswise — UT Southwestern Medical Center
gastroenterologists are using a new method
to freeze damaged cells in the esophagus,
preventing them from turning cancerous.
The Food and Drug Administration-approved cryoablation
therapy helps Barrett’s esophagus patients
with dysplasia, a condition in which normal
cells are transformed into potentially
cancerous ones.
“Due to damage from chronic stomach acid, they are people
who have a higher risk of developing
esophagus cancer,” said Dr. Jayaprakash
Sreenarasimhaiah, assistant professor of
internal medicine in the division of
digestive and liver disease at UT
Southwestern.
“The goal of this therapy is to literally freeze the damage
in its tracks and stop it before it turns to
cancer.”
Gastroenterologists, using a special catheter, spray liquid
nitrogen on the damaged tissue to freeze the
superficial lining of the esophagus, the
long tube that carries food from the throat
to the stomach.
The treated tissue eventually falls off, allowing normal
cells to grow and replace the damaged cells
in about six to eight weeks.
“Repeated treatments can actually help get rid of Barrett’s
esophagus with dysplasia and prevent the
progression to cancer,” said Dr.
Sreenarasimhaiah, a gastroenterologist who
specializes in endoscopic technology.
The minimally invasive cryoablation therapy has recently
been approved by the FDA for treating
Barrett’s, but it requires special training
and equipment available in only a handful of
centers in Texas and a few dozen nationally.
Barrett’s esophagus can result from ongoing heartburn,
which allows a constant splashing of acid
from the stomach into the esophagus.
Untreated, it can become Barrett’s with
dysplasia, in which cells start to
transform.
Typical treatment includes endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR),
in which the damaged lining is scraped away,
a procedure that takes hours and can have
side effects such as bleeding or narrowing
of the esophagus.
The most aggressive approach includes surgery to remove
damaged portions of the tube.
Some patients, however, are too sick or elderly to be
candidates for surgery. Others simply want
another option.
“This is a disease we see in a lot of older patients with
other illnesses, so the decision to send
them to surgery requires careful
consideration,” Dr. Sreenarasimhaiah said.
“Cryoablation therapy is particularly attractive for older
patients who may have complications or other
medical issues – such as accompanying heart
or lung diseases – that make traditional
surgeries for Barrett’s with dysplasia too
risky.”
Cryoablation therapy takes about 30 to 40 minutes and
requires sedation. As with an endoscopy, a
tube down the patient’s throat is used to
insert a tiny camera and instruments. No
incisions are required.
Early results from studies show the therapy – similar to
that used by dermatologists to freeze off
warts – works well inside the esophagus,
though further study is needed, Dr.
Sreenarasimhaiah said.
“Patients may feel a little pain in the first couple of
days, like a heartburn-type pain, but that
starts to improve after a few days and after
that they usually don’t feel anything,” he
said.
“They can eat immediately after they wake. They are not on
a special diet, but they do continue their
anti-reflux medications.”
Visit
http://www.utsouthwestern.org/digestive
to learn more about UT Southwestern’s
clinical services in digestive disorders.
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