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Most cancers of the oesophagus are caused by escaped stomach cells

Most tumours of the oesophagus start as escaped stomach cells that turned cancerous, and a novel screening method of swallowing a sponge on a string could identify more cases
Oesophageal cancer, computer illustration.
An illustration of an oesophageal tumour
KATERYNA KON/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY

Most tumours of the oesophagus, the tube that carries food from the mouth to the stomach, are caused by escaped stomach cells that have become cancerous.

The finding makes it more likely that cancers of the gullet, also known as the oesophagus or food pipe, could be prevented by a screening method that identifies former stomach cells, says Rebecca Fitzgerald at the University of Cambridge.

The most common form of oesophagus tumour in the UK and other high-income countries is an adenocarcinoma, found towards the stomach end of the tube.

This kind of cancer was known to sometimes begin in a patch of abnormal cells, a condition known as Barrett’s oesophagus or just Barrett’s. But whether this is always the case was unknown, as was the origin of the cells; aside from stomach cells, other suspects included cells lining the oesophagus, cells from glands within the oesophagus and embryonic cells found at the junction between the oesophagus and the stomach.

In the new study, Fitzgerald’s team took samples from these and other tissues from 20 deceased organ donors without gullet cancer and compared them with existing studies on 321 samples of oesophageal adenocarcinomas. They compared the cells in several ways, including by genetic sequencing and through the pattern of chemical modifications to their DNA.

The team found that all the adenocarcinomas had originally been stomach cells and had gone through a stage of being Barrett’s cells. They could have reached the oesophagus by migration or by spreading through multiplication, or both ways, says Fitzgerald.

About 1 in 10 people with Barrett’s eventually develop cancer of the oesophagus, so some have regular check-ups using a camera put down their throat. But most people with Barrett’s are unaware of it.

Having prolonged heartburn is a risk factor for Barrett’s, so Fitzgerald’s team has developed a way to take a sample of cells from the oesophagus in people with heartburn. People swallow a small capsule attached to a string; in the stomach the capsule dissolves to release a 3-centimetre sponge, which is pulled back up by a nurse. On the way, the sponge collects cells lining the oesophagus, which can be tested.

Last year, that this method raised the identification of people with Barrett’s by 10-fold compared with usual care from a family doctor, which is to send people to hospital for a camera to be put down their throat under sedation, if their symptoms are concerning enough.

Science

Topics: Cancer