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Dr. Vipulroy Rathod

Patient Profile

Patient Name

Mr. Prakash Deshmukh

Age / Gender

58 Years / Male

Consultant

Dr. Vipulroy Dayanand Rathod

Hospital

Fortis Hospitals Limited, Mulund, Mumbai

Diagnosis

Early Oesophageal High-Grade Dysplasia in Barrett’s Oesophagus

Past History

Long-standing GERD (10 years) · Barrett’s oesophagus · Normal CT and PET scans

Patient Background

Mr. Prakash Deshmukh, a 58-year-old businessman from Aurangabad, Maharashtra, had lived with long-standing acid reflux for over a decade. A recent CT scan and a PET scan ordered elsewhere to investigate his persistent reflux and mild difficulty swallowing were reported as normal, with no mass or tumour seen. Reassured but still symptomatic, he sought a second opinion. His family searched for the Best Gastroenterologist In Mumbai capable of looking beyond standard scans. Dr. Vipulroy Rathod, Director of Gastroenterology at Fortis Mulund and South Asia’s pioneer of Endoscopic Ultrasound with over 20,000 EUS procedures, recommended a high-definition diagnostic endoscopy with advanced imaging — a level of scrutiny that cross-sectional scans simply cannot provide for the oesophageal lining.

Symptoms

Chronic acid reflux — heartburn and regurgitation for over 10 years, partly controlled with medication

Mild difficulty swallowing — occasional sensation of food sticking, recently more noticeable

Frequent throat clearing and intermittent cough — attributed to reflux

No alarming symptoms — no weight loss, no bleeding, no anaemia

Normal cross-sectional imaging — a false sense of reassurance after “clean” scans

Diagnostic Method

CT and PET scan review

both reported normal; cross-sectional imaging cannot detect flat, superficial mucosal changes

High-definition upper endoscopy

detailed inspection of the oesophageal lining revealing a Barrett’s segment with a subtle, suspicious flat area

NBI (Narrow Band Imaging) endoscopy

advanced light filtering highlighted abnormal mucosal and vascular patterns invisible on white-light and scans

Endoscopic Ultrasound (EUS)

confirmed the lesion was confined to the superficial mucosa with no deeper or nodal involvement

Targeted biopsies

histopathology confirmed high-grade dysplasia, a pre-cancerous change, with no invasive cancer

Disease Diagnosed

Mr. Deshmukh was diagnosed with high-grade dysplasia arising within Barrett’s oesophagus — a pre-cancerous transformation of the oesophageal lining caused by years of acid reflux. Critically, this flat, superficial change was completely invisible on both CT and PET scans, which only detect bulky masses or established tumours. As a gastroenterology specialist for early gastrointestinal neoplasia, Dr. Rathod recognised that detecting and removing this lesion now would prevent its progression to oesophageal cancer.

Risks if Left Untreated:

Progression of high-grade dysplasia to invasive oesophageal cancer

Need for major oesophageal surgery (oesophagectomy) if found at a later stage

Requirement for chemotherapy and radiotherapy with advanced disease

Significantly reduced survival once the cancer becomes invasive

Treatment Plan

Dr. Vipulroy Rathod performed Endoscopic Mucosal Resection (EMR) to remove the dysplastic segment of the oesophageal lining completely through the endoscope, curing the pre-cancerous change in a single session without any surgical incision.

Why Early Endoscopic Detection and EMR Mattered

01 — Catching What Scans Cannot See

CT and PET scans only reveal masses. Advanced endoscopic imaging detects flat, pre-cancerous change at its earliest, most curable stage.

02 — Cure Before Cancer Forms

Removing high-grade dysplasia eliminates the lesion before it can ever become invasive cancer — true prevention, not just treatment.

03 — No Surgical Incision

The abnormal lining is removed entirely through the endoscope. No chest or abdominal surgery, no removal of the oesophagus.

04 — Faster Recovery

Days of recovery instead of months. Most patients return to normal activity within a week, compared to a long, difficult recovery after oesophagectomy.

How the Procedure Was Performed
  • High-definition endoscopy — the oesophagus was re-examined under high-definition white light to relocate the Barrett’s segment and suspicious area.
  • NBI mapping — narrow band imaging was used to precisely delineate the margins of the dysplastic lesion for complete removal.
  • Submucosal lift — a solution was injected beneath the lesion to lift the abnormal mucosa away from the deeper oesophageal wall, ensuring a safe resection plane.
  • Mucosal resection — the lifted dysplastic segment was captured and resected en bloc using a band-ligation EMR technique.
  • Specimen retrieval — the resected tissue was retrieved intact and sent for detailed histopathology to confirm clear margins.
  • Site inspection — the resection bed was inspected and confirmed clean, with no bleeding and no residual abnormal tissue.
Procedure Summary

Procedure

Endoscopic Mucosal Resection (EMR) of dysplastic Barrett’s segment

Imaging Used

High-definition endoscopy with NBI; EUS for staging

Duration

60 minutes

Sedation

Conscious sedation with anaesthesia support

Hospital Stay

Day-care / overnight, discharged the following morning

Doctor’s Quote

“Scans are excellent at finding lumps, but a pre-cancerous change in the oesophageal lining is flat and microscopic — it simply does not show up on a CT or PET scan. With high-definition endoscopy and narrow band imaging, we could see what the scans missed entirely. We removed the abnormal lining through the endoscope and, in doing so, prevented a cancer before it ever formed. This is the real power of advanced diagnostic endoscopy — catching disease at the one stage where it is completely curable.”
Dr. Vipulroy Rathod, FASGE | Gastroenterologist in Mumbai | Director, Gastroenterology and Hepatobiliary Sciences, Fortis Hospital Mulund

Post-Procedure Guidelines

Soft diet for several days, advancing gradually as the resection site heals

Strict acid suppression (high-dose proton pump inhibitor) to protect the healing lining and control reflux

Avoid alcohol, smoking, and very hot or spicy foods during recovery

Surveillance endoscopy with NBI at scheduled intervals to confirm no recurrence of dysplasia

Ongoing follow-up with Dr. Vipulroy Rathod for reflux control and Barrett’s surveillance

Outcome

Timepoint Result
Within 24 hrs Comfortable, tolerating liquids, discharged with no complications
Histopathology Confirmed high-grade dysplasia fully removed with clear margins; no invasive cancer
1 Week Returned to normal activity, eating soft diet comfortably
1 Month Resection site healed well, reflux well controlled on medication
3 Months Surveillance endoscopy with NBI showed no residual or recurrent dysplasia
12 Months Remained dysplasia-free; ongoing routine Barrett’s surveillance

Long-Term Expectations

With the pre-cancerous lesion completely removed before it could progress, Mr. Deshmukh’s risk of developing oesophageal cancer has been dramatically reduced. He will continue regular surveillance endoscopy with narrow band imaging to detect and treat any new areas of Barrett’s change early. Strict reflux control, lifestyle modification, and adherence to his surveillance schedule will remain central to his long-term oesophageal health.

Patient Feedback

“My scans were normal and I was told there was nothing to worry about. Something still felt wrong, so I went to Dr. Rathod for one more opinion. His endoscopy found a problem the scans had completely missed — and he removed it before it could turn into cancer. He may well have saved my life. I cannot thank him enough.”
Prakash Deshmukh, 58 | Aurangabad, Maharashtra

“We had almost stopped worrying because every report said normal. Dr. Rathod took the time to look deeper and explained everything so clearly. Catching it this early changed everything for our family. We are forever grateful for his thoroughness.”
Mrs. Meena Deshmukh, Patient’s Wife | Aurangabad, Maharashtra

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