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First intent treatment for superficial circular esophageal neoplasm is surgical resection. Endoscopic mucosal resection is not recommended due to the high rate of subsequent esophageal stenosis (higher than 80%).
Surgical limits are related to a high level of morbidity due, in particular, to respiratory complications or infections that require prolonged hospitalisations, and by significant rate of mortality (from 2 to 5 %). As an alternative to the surgical treatment, an innovative technique to remove esophageal circular preneoplastic and neoplastic lesions has been developed: it consists to ablate the mucosa by means of a balloon of a fixed diameter which incorporates approximately 100 electrodes on its surface that emit radiofrequency waves (HALO® Radiofrequency Ablation Technology System). By varying the strength and the duration of the electrical impulses, it is possible to obtain a homogenous and controlled destruction of the tissue of the whole mucosa, leaving no remaining pre-neoplastic or neoplastic elements underneath. The technique will be used for high grade glandular epithelial neoplasia, Vienna 4-1 or 4-2, developed on a mucosa at risk, i.e. the Barrett's oesophagus, occupying more than half of the circumference of the esophagus and that requires surgical treatment. The expected benefit for the patient is linked to the reduced invasiveness of the technique in comparison to the surgery
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Age over 18 years,
General Condition WHO 0, 1 or 2,
ASA Class I and II, eligible for endoscopic or surgical treatment with curative intent,
Histological diagnosis of high grade glandular epithelial neoplasia (Vienna 4-1 to 4-46), possibly multifocal or stage 0 (Tis, N0, M0),
Endoscopic and histological confirmed diagnosis of intestinal metaplasia,
Histological diagnosis confirmed by two endoscopies with biopsies and two pathological readings; biopsies should be carried out according to the protocol of the SFED (four-quadrant biopsies every cm) with at least once acetic acid for staining. Operators describe Barrett's esophagus using he SFED planimetric model. The final exam will be no more than two months before the date of treatment and should have been achieved in investigator establishment,
Extension height of Barrett's esophagus upstream of the upper part of the gastric folds or palisade vessels:
In case of previous treatment by mucosal resection or submucosal dissection (DSM) for severe dysplasia or microinvasive carcinoma:
Patient may take an inhibitor of proton pump equivalent to 2 times 40 mg of esomeprazole,
No mediastinal or celiac, or suspected metastatic lymph nodes by EUS,
Affiliation to a social security system or similar,
Lack of participation in another clinical study,
Informed consent signed.
Exclusion criteria
- Aged under 18,
Lack of informed consent signed,
Radiofrequency treatment history,
on going neoplastic history with a short prognosis,
Concomitant participation in another clinical study
Contraindication to general anesthesia,
Patient with an esophageal location of scleroderma
Presence of a cardiac pacemaker or stimulator
Pregnant women or likely to be in the absence of effective contraception,
Esophageal stenosis preventing the passage of an endoscope,
Histology other than glandular neoplasia,
History of or current history of esophageal cancer invading the submucosal layer of the esophagus or more,
Surgical treatment history (except anti-reflux treatment) or esophageal radiotherapy,
previous esophageal treatment by another method ablation: photodynamic therapy, argon plasma coagulation, laser, ....
Esophageal varices observed in endoscopy,
Coagulopathy or taking anticoagulants responsible an INR> 1.3 or a platelet count <75,000 per microL,
Life expectancy of less than 3 years, due to intercurrent disease, especially neoplastic,
Severe Medical pathology:
VEMS (Maximum Expiratory Volume Second) <1L / min
PaO2 <60 mmHg
PaCO2> 45 mmHg
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
87 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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