Research Article

Age Cutoff and Yield of Prompt Esophagogastroduodenoscopy to Detect Malignancy in Vietnamese with Upper Gastrointestinal Symptoms: An Endoscopic Database Review of 472,744 Patients from 2014 to 2019

Table 1

Endoscopic and histopathologic characteristics of the upper gastrointestinal malignancies.

Endoscopic and histopathologic characteristicsn (%)

Esophagus (n = 440)
 Location, n (%)
  Cervical14 (3.2)
  Upper thoracic60 (13.6)
  Middle thoracic136 (30.9)
  Lower thoracic188 (42.7)
  Abdominal42 (9.5)

 Endoscopic type1, n (%)
  Type 01 (0.2)
  Type 1247 (56.1)
  Type 2153 (34.8)
  Type 317 (3.9)
  Type 418 (4.1)
  Type 54 (0.9)

 Pathologic type, n (%)
  Squamous cell carcinoma375 (85.2)
  Adenocarcinoma49 (11.1)
  Others16 (3.7)

Stomach (n = 1735)
 Location, n (%)
  Upper part109 (6.3)
  Middle part365 (21.0)
  Lower part975 (56.2)
  ≥ 2 parts involved286 (16.5)

 Endoscopic type2, n (%)
  Type 086 (5.0)
  Type 1186 (10.7)
  Type 2948 (54.6)
  Type 3301 (17.3)
  Type 4212 (12.2)
  Type 52 (0.1)

 Pathologic type, n (%)
  Adenocarcinoma
   Intestinal type1250 (72.0)
   Diffuse type418 (24.1)
  Lymphoma59 (3.4)
  Others8 (0.5)

Duodenum (n = 26)
 Location, n (%)
  Superior duodenal flexure3 (11.5)
  Descending part23 (88.5)

 Endoscopic type, n (%)
  Mass15 (57.7)
  Ulcerative9 (34.6)
  Infiltrative ulcerative2 (7.7)

 Pathologic type, n (%)
  Adenocarcinoma18 (69.2)
  Secondary carcinoma (invasion or metastasis)4 (15.4)
  Lymphoma2 (7.7)
  Gastrointestinal stromal tumor1 (3.8)
  Neuroendocrine tumor1 (3.8)

1, 2The endoscopic types of esophageal and gastric cancers were reported according to the classifications of the Japanese Esophageal Society and the Japanese Gastric Cancer Association, respectively.