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Query: UMLS:C0001430 (adenoma)
21,222 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The malignant potential of large-intestinal adenomas varies with size, histologic type, and grade of epithelial atypia in the same way in England and in Japan. Adenomas in England have greater malignant potential than those in Japan because they grow larger and more often show a villous growth pattern. Although the adenoma--carcinoma sequence operates in the same way in the two countries it is suggested that the higher incidence of colorectal cancer in England is due to the greater prevalence as well as the greater size of English adenomas. More studies of the epidemiology and geographic pathology of large-intestinal adenomas are needed to clarify their importance as a predisposing cause of colorectal cancer in low-risk as well as high-risk areas.
Dis Colon Rectum
PMID:Comparative histologic study of adenomas of the large intestine in Japan and England, with special reference to malignant potential. 83 54

A hospital record review identified 59 patients whose sole colorectal pathology was a pedunculated, adenomatous polyp with a focus of malignancy confined to the head of the tumor. Thirty-one patients had polyps with in-situ carcinoma, and 28 patients had foci of invasive carcinoma. Sixteen patients who had lesions in situ underwent laparotomy, and not a single instance of metastasis was found. Twenty patients who had carcinoma in situ received only local treatment, and 15 are alive and well. None of the patients treated locally has developed subsequent colorectal cancer, and 12 have survived at least five years following treatment. Of the 28 patients who had invasive carcinoma confined to the head of an adenoma, 19 are alive and well, and 17 have lived five years or more following treatment. There was one instance of lymph-node metastasis, which occurred in a patient who had a malignant lesion extending to the neck of the tumor and tumor cells in the lymphatics in the head of the polyp. All of the eight patients treated locally are alive and well, and five have lived at least five years following treatment. The results of this study, coupled with the rarity of reported metastasis from focally malignant, pedunculated, adenomatous colorectal polyps, strongly suggest that local treatment is sufficient for the vast majority of these lesions. Evidence from the literature suggests that resective therapy should be considered when 1) lymphatics within the head of the polyp contain tumor cells; 2) the cancer is highly undifferentiated; 3) the pedicle is extremely short and malignant changes extend to the neck of the adenoma.
Dis Colon Rectum
PMID:Management of focally malignant pedunculated adenomatous colorectal polyps. 127 76

We describe the clinical and pathologic features in four extended kindreds that are consistent with the hereditary flat adenoma syndrome (HFAS). This colon cancer susceptibility disorder is believed to be inherited as an autosomal dominant. The principal phenotypic marker is multiple colonic adenomas (usually less than 100), with a tendency for proximal location. The majority of these adenomas are flat or slightly raised and plaquelike, as opposed to polypoid. Colon cancers have typically developed in middle age and show no unusual histologic features. There are a variety of extracolonic manifestations, including adenomas and carcinomas of the small bowel and fundic gland polyps. The HFAS is contrasted with hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer and familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) and shown to be distinct from both in the numbers and distribution of colonic adenomas and the typical age of cancer diagnosis. The clinical implications of these findings are discussed. Given its linkage to the FAP locus on 5q and the phenotypic parallels between HFAS and FAP, we conclude that HFAS is a variant of FAP.
Dis Colon Rectum 1992 May
PMID:Hereditary flat adenoma syndrome: a variant of familial adenomatous polyposis? 131 29

To determine whether patients with colorectal adenomas containing a villous component (+vc group) have a higher incidence of synchronous or metachronous colorectal adenomas, 527 consecutive cases of completely removed colorectal adenoma were used. Synchronous adenomas were detected in 22.6 percent and 19.0 percent of the patients in the +vc and -vc groups, respectively. In the analysis of metachronous adenomas, 164 patients who had been followed for 1 to 11 years (mean, 3.31 years) were included. The cumulative adenoma-free rate according to Kaplan-Meier tended to be lower in the +vc group, the difference being statistically significant 1.0 to 1.2 years after treatment of the initial adenoma and the two curves being different based on the generalized Wilcoxon test. The numbers of newly detected adenomas annually were 1.76 and 0.86, and their annual incidences were 1.09 and 0.59 times, in the +vc and -vc groups, respectively. These results suggest the importance of the villous component as a predictor of metachronous colorectal adenomas.
Dis Colon Rectum 1992 Dec
PMID:Villous component as a marker for synchronous and metachronous colorectal adenomas. 147 16

Transanal endoscopic microsurgery (TEM) has emerged as a minimally invasive means of resecting rectal tumors. Developed in Germany and now being used with increasing frequency in the United States, TEM utilizes a 40-mm operating rectoscope, which is sealed with an airtight facepiece. Carbon dioxide is constantly infused, thereby distending the rectum and maintaining visibility. A variety of instruments, such as tissue graspers, a high-frequency knife, suction, and needle holders, are inserted through the facepiece. Adenomas that are small, large, or even circumferential, as well as selected carcinomas up to 24 cm, can be removed with TEM instrumentation. The optics provide sixfold magnification, and this, combined with the constantly distended operative field, allows for a precise excision of the tumor as well as closure of the wound. For lesions in the mid and upper rectum, TEM is an alternative to a transsacral or transabdominal approach, with subsequently shorter hospital stay and fewer complications.
Dis Colon Rectum 1992 Dec
PMID:Transanal endoscopic microsurgery. 147 24

Individuals with a family history of colorectal cancer are believed to be at an increased risk of developing colorectal neoplasia. To estimate this risk and the potential yield of screening colonoscopy in this population, we recruited and prospectively colonoscoped 181 asymptomatic first-degree relatives (FDR) of colorectal cancer patients and 83 asymptomatic controls (without a family history of colorectal cancer). The mean ages for the FDR and control groups were 48.2 +/- 12.5 and 54.8 +/- 11.0, respectively. Adenomatous polyps were detected in 14.4 percent of FDRs and 8.4 percent of controls. Although 92 percent of our FDRs had only one FDR afflicted with colon cancer, those subjects with two or more afflicted FDRs had an even higher risk of developing colonic adenomas (23.8 percent) than those with only one afflicted FDR (13.1 percent). A greater proportion of adenomas was found to be beyond the reach of flexible sigmoidoscopy in the FDR group than in the controls (48 percent vs. 25 percent, respectively). Logistic regression analysis revealed that age, male sex, and FDR status were independent risk factors for the presence of colonic adenomatous polyps (RR = 2.32, 2.86, and 3.49, respectively; P less than 0.001). Those at greatest risk for harboring an asymptomatic colonic adenoma are male FDRs over the age of 50 (40 percent vs. 20 percent for age-matched male controls). Based on probability curves, males with one FDR afflicted with colon cancer appear to have an increased risk of developing a colonic adenoma beginning at 40 years of age. Our results document, for the first time, an increased prevalence of colonoscopically detectable adenomas in asymptomatic first-degree relatives of colon cancer patients, as compared with asymptomatic controls, and support the use of colonoscopy as a routine screening tool in this high-risk group.
Dis Colon Rectum 1992 Jun
PMID:Colonoscopic screening for neoplasms in asymptomatic first-degree relatives of colon cancer patients. A controlled, prospective study. 841 86

A lectin histochemistry approach was adopted for comparative assessment of a colon cancer risk. Binding of Ulex europaeus agglutinin-I (UEA-I), peanut agglutinin (PNA), Griffonia simplicifolia agglutinin-II (GSA-II), and Dolichos biflorus agglutinin (DBA) was investigated in tumor and background tissue from a total of 34 adenoma and 44 cancer patients and compared with reaction patterns in control and familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) patients. Adenoma patients with UEA-I positive rectal mucosa were found to have a 33.3 percent familial history of large bowel cancer, which was significantly higher (P less than 0.05) than the respective 4.0 percent figure for patients with negative rectal mucosa. In the cancer patients, an even stronger correlation was noted, with a 63.2 percent UEA-I positive family history association being recorded, as opposed to 4.0 percent in the negative rectal mucosa patients (P less than 0.01). Thus, the results suggest that, apparently, normal rectal background mucosa of individuals genetically at high risk for colon and rectal cancer demonstrates a specific lectin binding ability similar to that of FAP patients and that the simple method using UEA-I staining of rectal biopsy specimens can be of practical use in identification of high-risk colorectal cancer.
Dis Colon Rectum 1991 Aug
PMID:Lectin staining of neoplastic and normal background colorectal mucosa in nonpolyposis and polyposis patients. 171 44

The proportion of so-called hyperplastic polyps among other colon epithelial tumours remains unclear. Colon polyps are studied in 400 patients: hyperplastic polyps are found in 107, a combination of hyperplastic polyp with tubular adenoma in 143, tubular adenoma in 72, villous adenoma in 41 and tubulovillous adenoma in 37 cases. Hyperplastic structures and formation of adenomatous structures were, as a rule, observed in a polyp tip, this corresponding to the increase of nuclei volume and DNA amount in the tip colonocytes. The determination of karyometric coefficient (the ratio of the colonocyte nuclei volume in the polyp tip to colonocytes in the intact mucosa) is proposed as a quantitative criterion of proliferative and dysplastic processes.
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PMID:[The morphogenesis of polyps of the large intestine]. 171 49

Surveillance after colorectal carcinoma and adenoma includes colonoscopy, which is a demanding procedure for the patient, doctor, and society. Therefore, it was investigated whether a simple fecal occult blood test could replace colonoscopy. Hemoccult-II (H-II) was performed before 1,244 colonoscopies in patients with previous cancer and before 328 colonoscopies in an adenoma surveillance program. The H-II test was positive in 3 of 9 patients with local recurrence, in 2 of 13 with metachronous cancer, and in 31 of 186 with adenomas. The test was positive more often in patients with large and multiple adenomas, sigmoid adenomas, and adenomas with villous elements and moderate-to-severe dysplasia, but the sensitivity did not reach more than 25 to 40 percent. It was concluded that markers more sensitive than H-II are needed to detect metachronous cancers and new adenomas. In the meantime, colonoscopy has to be used with intervals of several years, but not for detection of local recurrent cancer, which in most cases may be found by simpler means.
Dis Colon Rectum 1992 Mar
PMID:Can Hemoccult-II replace colonoscopy in surveillance after radical surgery for colorectal cancer and after polypectomy? 174 72

The purpose of this study is to demonstrate that a transanal excisional approach can be successfully used in most cases of large, benign, rectal villous adenomas with acceptable rates of recurrence and complications in comparison with historic controls. A retrospective review of all cases of benign, large, rectal villous adenomas at this institution from 1975 to 1985 was performed. A total of 122 patients had large, benign, rectal villous adenomas excised. All except five were treated by transanal excision. Thirty-eight percent of lesions were more proximal than 8 cm from the anal verge. The average follow-up was 55 months. Twenty-seven percent of patients were treated for residual disease after a known incomplete initial treatment or an adenoma at the same location within 6 months of the original treatment. Thirty percent of patients were treated for recurrent adenoma 6 months after complete initial treatment. Two patients (1.7 percent) with recurrences were found to have invasive carcinoma. Both patients had excisional therapy, and one had additional radiation therapy for these carcinomas. Ten postoperative hemorrhages and two perforations occurred as symptomatic or serious complications. This renders a 10 percent complication rate for the study group, which is lower than reported by others using the Kraske or trans-sphincteric approach to the rectum. Because of the expected higher recurrence rate, regular follow-up is necessary for this type of therapy. In conclusion, this study demonstrated that transanal excision of large, benign, rectal villous adenomas can be a safe and effective method of treatment.
Dis Colon Rectum 1991 Oct
PMID:Transanal excision of large, rectal villous adenomas. 191 21


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