Retrospective Study
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2025.
World J Gastroenterol. Feb 7, 2025; 31(5): 101280
Published online Feb 7, 2025. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v31.i5.101280
Table 1 General clinical characteristics of patients with gastrointestinal schwannomas (n = 229), n (%)
Variable
Overall
Age, year, median (IQR)56.00 (48.00, 63.00)
Tumor size, cm, median (IQR)2.75 (1.80, 4.03)
Duration of follow-up, month, median (IQR)13.78 (5.53, 30.60)
Sex
    Female148 (64.6)
    Male81 (35.4)
Year of diagnosis
    2007-201332 (14.0)
    2014-201983 (36.2)
    2020-2024114 (49.8)
Tumor location
    Esophagus23 (10.0)
    Esophagus (unspecified site)3 (1.3)
    Upper esophagus5 (2.2)
    Middle esophagus6 (2.6)
    Lower esophagus9 (3.9)
    Stomach176 (76.9)
    Stomach (unspecified site)35 (15.3)
    Gastric cardia3 (1.3)
    Gastric fundus16 (7.0)
    Gastric body94 (41.0)
    Gastric angle3 (1.3)
    Gastric antrum25 (10.9)
    Intestines30 (13.1)
    Duodenum2 (0.9)
    Ascending colon8 (3.5)
    Transverse colon6 (2.6)
    Descending colon3 (1.3)
    Sigmoid colon3 (1.3)
    Rectum8 (3.5)
Table 2 Comorbidities of patients with gastrointestinal schwannomas (n = 229), n (%)
Variable
Overall
Gastrointestinal neoplasms
    Esophageal leiomyoma1 (0.4)
    Gastric stromal tumor1 (0.4)
    Gastric adenocarcinoma2 (0.9)
    Colorectal adenoma2 (0.9)
    Rectal adenocarcinoma1 (0.4)
    Adenoma of the appendix1 (0.4)
Other tumors
    Hepatocellular carcinoma4 (1.7)
    Intraductal papillary mucinous tumor of the pancreas1 (0.4)
    Adrenal cortical adenoma1 (0.4)
    Clear cell carcinoma of the kidney3 (1.3)
    Hamartoma of kidney1 (0.4)
    Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma1 (0.4)
    Leukemia1 (0.4)
    Ovarian adenoma2 (0.9)
    Adenocarcinoma of lung2 (0.9)
    Meningioma1 (0.4)
    Adenocarcinoma of prostate1 (0.4)
    Breast cancer1 (0.4)
    Thyroid cancer1 (0.4)
Table 3 Clinical diagnosis and treatment methods, n (%)
Variable
Overall
Imaging diagnosis (n = 168)
    Space-occupying lesion/mass25 (14.9)
    Gastrointestinal stromal tumor117 (69.6)
    Leiomyoma8 (4.8)
    Schwannoma8 (4.8)
    Tumor9 (5.4)
    No obvious abnormality1 (0.6)
Endoscopic diagnosis (n = 179)
    Gastrointestinal stromal tumor81 (45.2)
    Submucosal tumor95 (53.1)
    Space-occupying lesion/mass3 (1.7)
Endoscopic ultrasound diagnosis (n = 84)
    Gastrointestinal stromal tumor64 (76.2)
    Leiomyoma8 (9.5)
    Schwannoma5 (6.0)
    Granular cell tumor2 (2.4)
    Submucosal tumor5 (5.9)
Clinical diagnosis (n = 229)
    Space-occupying lesion/mass105 (45.9)
    Gastrointestinal stromal tumor80 (34.9)
    Leiomyoma3 (1.3)
    Tumor37 (16.2)
    Other diagnosis4 (1.7)
Treatment method (n = 214)
    Endoscopic surgery65 (30.4)
    Endoscopic full-thickness resection33 (15.4)
    Endoscopic submucosal dissection23 (10.7)
    Submucosal tunnel endoscopic resection8 (3.7)
    Snare polypectomy1 (0.5)
    Surgery149 (69.6)
Table 4 Immunohistochemical results of patients with gastrointestinal schwannomas, n (%)
Variable
Overall
S-100 (n = 209)
    +207 (99.0)
    -2 (1.0)
SOX10 (n = 64)
    +64 (100.0)
CD117 (n = 212)
    -209 (98.6)
    + (focal)3 (1.4)
DOG-1 (n = 181)
    -179 (98.9)
    + (focal)2 (1.1)
SMA (n = 205)
    -187 (91.2)
    +18 (8.8)
Desmin (n = 186)
    -171 (91.9)
    +15 (8.1)
Ki-67 (n = 183)
    < 5%121 (66.1)
    5-10%61 (33.3)
    > 10%1 (0.6)
SDHB (n = 46)
    +46 (100.0)
HMB45 (n = 27)
    -27 (100.0)
Table 5 Comparison of endoscopic surgery and surgical treatment of gastrointestinal schwannomas, n (%)
Variable
Endoscopic surgery (n = 65)
Surgery (n = 149)
P value
Age, year, median (IQR)53.00 (46.00, 62.00)57.00 (48.00, 64.00)0.155
Tumor size, cm, median (IQR)1.60 (1.20, 2.50)3.50 (2.30, 4.50)< 0.001
Sex0.045
    Female34 (52.3)101 (67.8)
    Male31 (47.7)48 (32.2)
Tumor location0.047
    Intestines7 (10.8)23 (15.4)
    Esophagus12 (18.5)11 (7.4)
    Stomach46 (70.8)115 (77.2)
Year of diagnosis0.002
    2007-20133 (4.6)28 (18.8)
    2014-201918 (27.7)56 (37.6)
    2020-202444 (67.7)65 (43.6)