| Literature DB >> 35433207 |
Filsan Farah1, Swati G Patel2,3, Jeannine M Espinoza2,3, Nicholas Jensen4, Bryson W Katona4, Charles Muller5, Sonia S Kupfer5, Jennifer M Weiss6, Alice Hinton7,8, Peter P Stanich8.
Abstract
Background and study aims The majority of patients with 10 or more cumulative colorectal adenomas have uninformative genetic testing and meet criteria for colonic adenomatous polyposis of unknown etiology (CPUE). The yield of upper gastrointestinal screening in patients with CPUE after multi-gene panel testing is unknown and our objective was to characterize this. Patient and methods A multicenter, retrospective analysis of screening upper endoscopies in adults with CPUE after multi-gene panel testing was performed. Those with a history of gastroduodenal neoplasia prior to CPUE diagnosis were excluded. Demographic and clinical variables were collected and compared. Results One hundred and twenty-eight patients with CPUE were included from five participating centers. Nine (7.0 %) had gastroduodenal neoplasia on initial screening upper endoscopy. Those with over 100 colorectal adenomas had a significantly higher rate of gastroduodenal neoplasia than those with 20-99 or 10-19 colorectal adenomas (44.4 % vs 4.1 % vs 4.4 %, P = 0.002). Similar results were seen when the analysis was restricted to only duodenal or ampullary adenomas. The only malignancy was a gastric cancer in a patient with 20 to 99 colorectal adenomas. When comparing patients with gastroduodenal neoplasia to those without, the only significantly different characteristic was the cumulative number of colorectal adenomas. Conclusions We found a 7 % rate of gastroduodenal neoplasia in patients with CPUE after multi-gene panel testing. Although patients with ≥ 100 colorectal adenomas had a significantly higher risk, over 4 % of patients with 10 to 99 colorectal adenomas had gastroduodenal neoplasia. Given this, we recommend a screening upper endoscopy at the time of a colonoscopy after CPUE diagnosis. The Author(s). This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonDerivative-NonCommercial License, permitting copying and reproduction so long as the original work is given appropriate credit. Contents may not be used for commercial purposes, or adapted, remixed, transformed or built upon. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35433207 PMCID: PMC9010079 DOI: 10.1055/a-1784-0166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endosc Int Open ISSN: 2196-9736
Demographics and clinical history.
| n = 128 | ||
| Age at index endoscopy (mean, SD) | 58.1 | 13.0 |
| Women | 51 | 39.8 % |
| Body mass index (mean, SD) | 29.3 | 6.4 |
| Race | ||
White (non-Hispanic) | 115 | 89.8 % |
Black | 12 | 9.4 % |
Unknown | 1 | 0.8 % |
| Alcohol use | ||
Light | 47 | 36.7 % |
Heavy | 8 | 6.3 % |
None or unknown | 73 | 57 % |
| Tobacco history | ||
Former smoker | 32 | 25 % |
Current smoker | 33 | 25.8 % |
Never smoker | 63 | 49.2 % |
| Aspirin use (daily) | 41 | 32.0 % |
|
History of
| 14 | 10.9 % |
| Cumulative number of colorectal adenomas | ||
10–19 adenomas | 46 | 35.9 % |
20–99 adenomas | 73 | 57.0 % |
≥ 100 adenomas | 9 | 7.0 % |
| History of colectomy | 19 | 14.8 % |
|
History of cancer
| 26 | 20.3 % |
| History of colorectal cancer | 13 | 10.2 % |
| History of thyroid cancer | 4 | 3.1 % |
| Family history of colon cancer in first degree relative | 33 | 25.8 % |
| Family history of polyposis in first degree relative | 11 | 8.6 % |
| Variant of uncertain significance in a gene of interest | 24 | 18.8 % |
|
Single variant in a biallelic condition
| 4 | 3.1 % |
Excluding non-melanoma skin cancers
MSH3, MUTYH , NTLH1
Genes of interest included in multi-gene panel testing
| n = 128 | ||
|
| 128 | 100 % |
|
| 128 | 100 % |
|
| 121 | 94.5 % |
|
| 121 | 94.5 % |
|
| 121 | 94.5 % |
|
| 121 | 94.5 % |
|
| 120 | 93.8 % |
|
| 119 | 93.0 % |
|
| 119 | 93.0 % |
|
| 115 | 89.8 % |
|
| 115 | 89.8 % |
|
| 113 | 88.3 % |
|
| 98 | 76.6 % |
|
| 53 | 41.4 % |
|
| 52 | 40.6 % |
|
| 10 | 7.8 % |
|
| 6 | 4.7 % |
Fig. 1Results of index screening upper endoscopy in colonic adenomatous polyposis of unknown etiology cohorts grouped by cumulative number of colorectal adenomas.
Comparison of participants grouped by gastroduodenal neoplasia
| With gastroduodenal neoplasia | Without gastroduodenal neoplasia | ||||
| n = 9 | n = 119 | ||||
| Age at index endoscopy (mean, SD) | 52.3 | 13.9 | 58.5 | 12.8 | 0.168 |
| Women (sex) | 5 | 55.6 % | 46 | 38.6 % | 0.482 |
| Body mass index (mean, SD) | 28.7 | 10.3 | 29.3 | 6.1 | 0.794 |
| Race | 1.000 | ||||
White (non-Hispanic) | 8 | 88.9 % | 107 | 89.9 % | |
Black | 1 | 11.1 % | 11 | 9.2 % | |
Unknown | 0 | 0 % | 1 | 0.8 % | |
| Alcohol use | 1.000 | ||||
Light | 3 | 33.3 % | 44 | 37.0 % | |
Heavy | 0 | 0 % | 8 | 6.7 % | |
None or unknown | 6 | 66.7 % | 67 | 56.3 % | |
| Tobacco history | 0.437 | ||||
Former smoker | 2 | 22.2 % | 30 | 25.2 % | |
Current smoker | 4 | 44.4 % | 29 | 24.4 % | |
Never smoker | 3 | 33.3 % | 60 | 50.4 % | |
| Aspirin use (daily) | 3 | 33.3 % | 38 | 31.9 % | 1.000 |
|
History of
| 1 | 11.1 % | 13 | 10.9 % | 1.000 |
| Cumulative number of colorectal adenomas | 0.002 | ||||
10–19 adenomas | 2 | 22.2 % | 44 | 37.0 % | |
20–99 adenomas | 3 | 33.3 % | 70 | 58.8 % | |
≥ 100 adenomas | 4 | 44.4 % | 5 | 4.2 % | |
| History of colectomy | 3 | 33.3 % | 16 | 13.5 % | 0.130 |
|
History of cancer
| 1 | 11.1 % | 25 | 21.0 % | 0.685 |
| History of colon cancer | 0 | 0 % | 13 | 10.9 % | 0.597 |
| Family history of colorectal cancer in first degree relative | 3 | 33.3 % | 30 | 25.2 % | 0.694 |
| Family history of polyposis in first degree relative | 1 | 11.1 % | 10 | 8.4 % | 0.567 |
| Variant of uncertain significance in a gene of interest | 1 | 12.5 % | 23 | 22.3 % | 1.000 |
|
Single variant in a biallelic condition
| 1 | 12.5 % | 3 | 3.0 % | 0.266 |
Excluding non-melanoma skin cancers.
MSH3 , MUTYH , NTLH1