A270 RISK FACTORS FOR COLORECTAL NEOPLASIA DEVELOPMENT IN INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE PATIENTS WITH PRIMARY SCLEROSING CHOLANGITIS: A CASE-CONTROL STUDY
L van Lierop, M Derks, M te Groen, C Tran, E Lytvyak, A Montano Loza, F Hoentjen

TL;DR
This study finds that active inflammation in the colon is not always linked to colorectal neoplasia in patients with inflammatory bowel disease and primary sclerosing cholangitis.
Contribution
The study identifies that only 35% of colorectal neoplasia lesions were preceded by active mucosal inflammation in PSC-IBD patients.
Findings
The risk of colorectal neoplasia is high in PSC-IBD patients with a 25-year cumulative risk up to 50%.
Only 35% of CRN lesions were found in colonic segments with prior inflammation.
Endoscopic remission was observed in nearly half of the cases before lesion detection.
Abstract
Patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and concomitant primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC-IBD) have a 25-year cumulative risk of up to 50% to develop colorectal neoplasia (CRN). Mucosal inflammation is an important driver of CRN development in IBD, but it is unknown whether this also applies to PSC-IBD patients. We aimed to assess the impact of active mucosal inflammation per colonic segment and endoscopic remission on CRN risk. This is a single-center case-control study, including cases with PSC-IBD with CRN, and controls with PSC-IBD without CRN. Exclusion criteria were a CRN diagnosis prior to IBD or PSC diagnosis, familial CRC syndromes, and insufficient endoscopic follow-up (ampersand:003C2 available colonoscopy reports, and for cases, ampersand:003C2 available endoscopy reports before CRN diagnosis). Data was collected on demographics, IBD and PSC disease…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLiver Diseases and Immunity · Inflammatory Bowel Disease · Microscopic Colitis
