Polyp missing rate and its associated risk factors of referring hospitals for endoscopic resection of advanced colorectal neoplasia
Missed polyps are frequently observed in surveillance colonoscopy or referral resection. We evaluated the polyp missing rate and its associated risk factors in patients who were referred to a tertiary hospital for endoscopic resection of advanced colorectal neoplasia.A total of 388 patients with adv...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Medicine (Baltimore) 2017-05, Vol.96 (19), p.e6742-e6742 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Missed polyps are frequently observed in surveillance colonoscopy or referral resection. We evaluated the polyp missing rate and its associated risk factors in patients who were referred to a tertiary hospital for endoscopic resection of advanced colorectal neoplasia.A total of 388 patients with advanced neoplasia who underwent colonoscopy in their referring hospitals and only endoscopic resection without total colonoscopy in Pusan National University Yangsan Hospital from 2009 to 2014 and who underwent surveillance colonoscopy within 6 to 12 months were retrospectively analyzed.The per-patient missing rate for polyps, adenomas, and advanced neoplasia in referring hospital were 58.2% (226 cases), 47.2% (183 cases), and 5.7% (22 cases), respectively. The advanced neoplasia in surveillance colonoscopy comprised the following: ≥1 cm lesions (11 cases, 50%), high-grade dysplasia (4 cases, 18.2%), villous adenoma (4 cases, 18.2%), and invasive cancer (3 cases, 13.6%). Risk factors for missed adenomas in multivariate analysis were ≥60 years (P = .004), male (P |
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ISSN: | 0025-7974 1536-5964 |
DOI: | 10.1097/MD.0000000000006742 |