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Browsing by Subject "Colorectal polyps"
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Item Endoscopic management of large ileocecal valve lesions over an 18-year interval(Thieme Open, 2019) Ponugoti, Prasanna L.; Broadley, Heather M.; Garcia, Jonathan; Rex, Douglas K.; Medicine, School of MedicineBackground and study aims Ileocecal valve (ICV) lesions are challenging to remove endoscopically. Patients and methods This was a retrospective cohort study, performed at an academic tertiary US hospital. Sessile polyps or flat ICV lesions ≥ 20 mm in size referred for endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR) were included. Successful resection rates, complication rates and recurrence were compared to lesions ≥ 20 mm in size not located on the ICV. Results During an 18-year interval, there were 118 ICV lesions ≥ 20 mm with mean size 28.6 mm (44.9 % females; mean age 71.6 years), comprising 9.03 % of all referred polyps. Ninety ICV lesions (76.3 %) were resected endoscopically, compared to 91.3 % of non-ICV lesions (P < 0.001). However, in the most recent 8 years, successful EMR of ICV lesions increased to 93 %. Conventional adenomas comprised 92.2 % of ICV lesions and 7.8 % were serrated. Delayed hemorrhage and perforation occurred in 3.3 % and 0 % of ICV lesions, respectively, compared to 4.8 % and 0.5 % in the non-ICV group. At first follow-up, rates of residual polyp in the ICV and non-ICV groups were 16.5 % and 13.6 %, respectively (P = 0.485). At second follow-up residual rates in the ICV and non-ICV lesion groups were 18.6 % and 6.7 %, respectively (P = .005). Conclusions Large ICV polyps are a common source of tertiary referrals. Over an 18-year experience, risk of EMR for ICV polyps was numerically lower, and risk of recurrence was numerically higher at first follow and significantly higher at second follow-up compared to non-ICV polyps.Item Reinterpretation of histology of proximal colon polyps called hyperplastic in 2001(WJG Press and Baishideng, 2009-08-14) Khalid, Omer; Radaideh, Sofyan; Cummings, Oscar W.; O’Brien, Michael J.; Goldblum, John R.; Rex, Douglas K.; Medicine, School of MedicineAIM: To evaluate how proximal colon polyps interpreted as hyperplastic polyps in 2001 would be interpreted by expert pathologists in 2007. METHODS: Forty consecutive proximal colon polyps ≥ 5 mm in size, removed in 2001, and originally interpreted as hyperplastic polyps by general pathologists at Indiana University, were reviewed in 2007 by 3 GI pathologists. RESULTS: The gastrointestinal (GI) pathologists interpreted 85%, 43% and 30% of the polyps as sessile serrated polyps (sessile serrated adenomas). The overall Kappa was 0.16. When diagnoses were compared in pairs, Kappa values were 0.38 and 0.25 (fair agreement) and 0.14 (slight agreement). CONCLUSION: Many polyps interpreted as hyperplastic in 2001 were considered sessile serrated lesions by GI pathologists in 2007, but there is substantial inter-observer variation amongst GI pathologists.Item Sessile serrated lesions: Searching for the true prevalence(Thieme, 2021-04) Kahi, Charles J.; Rex, Douglas K.; Medicine, School of MedicineItem Surveillance colonoscopy following resection of colorectal polyps and cancer(Hindawi Publishing Corporation, 2001-01) Rex, Douglas K.; Medicine, School of MedicinePatients undergoing clearing colonoscopy with resection of adenomas should generally have their next examination at three years. Exceptions include large sessile adenomas removed piecemeal (re-examine at two to six months until no evidence of recurrent polyp, then at one year), average risk patients with a single tubular adenoma (next examination at five years) and patients with 'numerous' adenomas (next examination at one or two years). Patients with surgically resected colorectal cancer should have a clearing colonoscopy preoperatively or within two to three months of surgery in obstructed patients, even if the preoperative barium enema is negative for proximal lesions. After the clearing colonoscopy, subsequent examinations can be performed based on the associated adenoma findings.