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WHICH LESIONS ARE AT HIGHER RISK OF DEVELOPING COLORECTAL CARCINOMAS: SUPERFICIALLY ELEVATED SERRATED LESIONS OR DEPRESSED LESIONS?

QUAIS LESÕES APRESENTAM MAIOR RISCO DE EVOLUÇÃO PARA CARCINOMAS COLORRETAIS: AS SERRILHADAS SUPERFICIALMENTE ELEVADAS OU AS DEPRIMIDAS?

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND:

There are lesions that are still being missed in colonoscopy. Many of those could be superficially elevated serrated lesions or depressed ones.

AIMS:

The aim of this study was to compare the histopathological characteristics of these lesions and their risks for submucosal carcinoma.

METHODS:

This is a retrospective, cross-sectional, and observational study comparing 217 superficially elevated serrated lesions larger than 5 mm resected by colonoscopies (G1) with 558 depressed lesions (G2).

RESULTS:

In G1, 217 lesions were found in 12,653 (1.7%) colonoscopies; in G2, 558 lesions were found in 36,174 (1.5%) colonoscopies. In G1, 63.4% were women and in G2, there was no gender predominance. The average size of G1 was 16.2 mm and G2 was 9.2 mm (p<0.001). G1 predominated on the proximal colon and G2 on the distal and rectum (p<0.001). In G1, there were 214 (98.6%) low-grade intramucosal neoplasia and 3 (1.4%) high-grade intramucosal neoplasia. Excluding 126 hyperplastic polyps and considering 91 sessile serrated adenomas in G1, we observed 88 (96.7%) low-grade intramucosal neoplasia and 3 (3.3%) high-grade intramucosal neoplasia; in G2, we observed 417 (74.7%) low-grade intramucosal neoplasia, 113 (20.3%) high-grade intramucosal neoplasia, and 28 (5.0%) submucosal adenocarcinomas (p<0.001).

CONCLUSION:

Depressed lesions significantly had more high-grade intramucosal neoplasia and more invasive carcinomas in the submucosal layer than superficially elevated serrated lesions and more than superficially elevated sessile serrated adenomas.

HEADINGS
Colonoscopy; Mass Screening; Colorectal Neoplasms; Colon; Polyps

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