| Literature DB >> 32487124 |
Xian Hua Gao1,2, Juan Li3, Zi Ye Zhao1,2, Xiao Dong Xu1,2, Yi Qi Du2,4, Hong Li Yan2,5, Lian Jie Liu6, Chen Guang Bai7,8, Wei Zhang9,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Juvenile polyposis syndrome (JPS) is a rare disorder characterized by the presence of multiple juvenile polyps in the gastrointestinal tract, and germline mutations in SMAD4 or BMPR1A. Due to its rarity and complex clinical manifestation, misdiagnosis often occurs in clinical practice. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Adenoma; Dysplasia; Familial adenomatous polyposis; Juvenile polyposis syndrome; Misdiagnosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32487124 PMCID: PMC7268223 DOI: 10.1186/s12876-020-01238-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Gastroenterol ISSN: 1471-230X Impact factor: 3.067
Fig. 1Colonoscopic findings of the father. a: rectal adenocarcinoma; b, c: pedunculated polyps; d: sessile polyps with mulberry shape
Fig. 2Pathological manifestation of the two examined colorectal polyps in the father. a Gross appearance of one polyp. The right half is the polyp, and the left half is normal mucosa. b Magnified image of the selected rectangular area from panel A, showing cystically dilated glands with slight dysplasia. c Gross appearance of the other polyp. The right half was the polyp, and the left half was normal mucosa. d Magnified image of the selected rectangular area from panel c, showing glands with severe dysplasia. It was diagnosed as adenoma
Fig. 3Colonoscopic manifestations of the son. a-f multiple polypoid lesions in the rectum and colon
Fig. 4Resected specimen of the subtotal colon from the son. a Whole view of the resected specimen, from the cecum to the descending codlon. b Polyps in the cecum and ascending colon. c Polyps in the hepatic flexure colon. d Huge polyps in the hepatic flexure, transverse colon, and splenic flexure
Fig. 5Pathological manifestation of two examined colorectal polyps in the son. a Gross appearance of one polyp. The left half was the polyp, and the right half was normal mucosa. b Magnified image of the selected rectangular area from panel a, showing typical juvenile polyp, with cystically dilated glands, abundant mucus in the gland cavity, cuboidal epithelium, abundance of edematous lamina propria. c Gross appearance of the other polyp. The right half was the polyp, and the left half was normal mucosa. d: Magnified image of the selected rectangular area from panel c, showing typical juvenile polyp
Fig. 6a Genogram of the proband (upper left quarter in purple color indicating colorectal cancer; black color indicating JPS; Diag: diagnosis; CC: colon cancer; RC: rectal cancer). b The structure of the BMPR1A gene. The novel mutation is in exon 8. c Evolutionary conservation of amino acid residues altered by BMPR1A: c.949_952delCTCT (p.L317Mfs) across different species. d Local structures around the mutation site of the wild type and mutant BMPR1A protein generated by Swiss-model online software. The structural differences are apparent
Differences in clinicopathological characteristics and treatment between JPS and FAP
| Parameters | JPS | FAP |
|---|---|---|
| Clinical presentation | Multiple juvenile polyps throughout the gastrointestinal tract. The lifetime cancer risk is 10–50%. | Early onset of hundreds to thousands of polyps throughout the colorectum. The lifetime cancer risk is 100% by age 50. |
| Endoscopic appearance | The polyps vary in size, shape and number. Typical: pedunculated, strawberry shape, 5~100 polyps. | Classical: 100-thousands polyps, Attenuated: < 100 polyps. |
| Pathological findings | Hamartomatous polyps. | Adenomatous polyps. |
| Extracolonic lesions | Gastric cancer, small intestine polyp, pancreas cancer, hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) | CHRPE, epidermoid cysts, osteoma, desmoid tumor, hepatoblastoma, supernumerary teeth, thyroid cancer, brain tumor |
| Genetic investigations | Autosomal dominant, about 50–60% had germline | Autosomal dominant, about 80% had germline |
| Treatment | Most could be treated by polypectomy. Colectomy is rarely needed. | Most require TC + IRA or TPC + IPAA. |
CHRPE Congenital hypertrophy of the retinal pigmented epithelium