» Articles » PMID: 18232199

[British and American Screening Guidelines Inadequate for Prevention of Colorectal Carcinoma in Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease]

Overview
Specialty General Medicine
Date 2008 Feb 1
PMID 18232199
Citations 4
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Objective: To determine how many cases of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD)-related colorectal cancer (CRC) occur before recommended colonoscopy screening commences.

Design: Descriptive.

Method: A nationwide automated histological and cytopathological archive (PALGA) was used to identify patients with IBD and CRC in the period January 1990-June 2006 at the University Medical Center Utrecht, The Netherlands. The interval between the diagnosis of IBD or IBD-related symptoms and the diagnosis of CRC was calculated. The observed interval was compared with the recommended starting point for surveillance according to the British Society of Gastroenterology (BSG) and the American Gastroenterological Association (AGA), i.e. after 8-10 years for pancolitis or after 15-20 years for left-sided colitis.

Results: 33 colorectal cancers were found in 29 patients with IBD. The median age at the time of diagnosis was 29 years (range: 11-82) for IBD and 47 years (range: 23-82) for CRC. 7 of the 29 patients (24%) developed CRC before the minimum recommended time to initiate screening (8 years for pancolitis, 15 years for left-sided colitis), and 9 patients (31%) developed CRC within the maximum recommended time to initiate screening (10 years for pancolitis, 20 years for left-sided colitis). If the onset of IBD-related symptoms was considered the starting point of the disease (rather than the diagnosis of IBD), 17-24% of patients developed a CRC before surveillance would have commenced.

Conclusion: These results suggest that, by following the British and American guidelines for screening for IBD-related CRC, a substantial portion of cases (17-31%) would not be diagnosed in a timely manner.

Citing Articles

Inflammatory Bowel Disease-Associated Colorectal Cancer: Translational and Transformational Risks Posed by Exogenous Free Hemoglobin Alpha Chain, A By-Product of Extravasated Erythrocyte Macrophage Erythrophagocytosis.

Bragg M, Breaux W, MKoma A Medicina (Kaunas). 2023; 59(7).

PMID: 37476546 PMC: 10358352. DOI: 10.3390/medicina59071254.


Cost-effectiveness of endovenous laser ablation of the great saphenous vein in patients with uncomplicated primary varicosis.

Luebke T, Brunkwall J BMC Cardiovasc Disord. 2015; 15:138.

PMID: 26510413 PMC: 4625802. DOI: 10.1186/s12872-015-0130-1.


Implications of the colonic deposition of free hemoglobin-α chain: a previously unknown tissue by-product in inflammatory bowel disease.

Myers J, Schaffer M, Korolkova O, Williams A, Gangula P, MKoma A Inflamm Bowel Dis. 2014; 20(9):1530-47.

PMID: 25078150 PMC: 4134710. DOI: 10.1097/MIB.0000000000000144.


Inflammatory bowel disease-associated colorectal cancer: proctocolectomy and mucosectomy do not necessarily eliminate pouch-related cancer incidences.

MKoma A, Moses H, Adunyah S Int J Colorectal Dis. 2011; 26(5):533-52.

PMID: 21311893 PMC: 4154144. DOI: 10.1007/s00384-011-1137-4.