Background: The biologic significance of esophageal dysplasia has not yet been completely elucidated, especially regarding the process of multiple occurrences of squamous cell carcinoma.
Methods: The multiplicity of dysplasia in 73 patients with solitary carcinoma of the esophagus (Group I) and 21 with multiple carcinomas (Group II) was compared in surgically resected specimens.
Results: Thirty-nine second carcinomas were identified in 13 patients of Group II, and all were superficial. The incidences of five or more isolated dysplasias in cases without continuity to a carcinomatous lesion, was 6.8% and 66.7% in Groups I and II, respectively (P < 0.01). In a case with three or more carcinomas, the incidence increased to 84.6%. The coexistence of all grades of isolated dysplasias was observed in 10 patients (47.6%) in Group II but in only 6 patients (8.2%) in Group I (P < 0.01).
Conclusions: These findings suggest that various degrees of evolving biologically related lesions, such as dysplasia and carcinoma, can occur multicentrically in the same esophagus.