Ileal Pouch Cancer Detected More than 30 Years after Restorative Proctocolectomy for Ulcerative Colitis
Tetsuhiro Urashima, Kenji Tatsumi, Nao Obara, Eiichi Nakao, Sayumi Saito, Koki Goto, Hirosuke Kuroki, Kazutaka Koganei, Akira Sugita

TL;DR
A rare case of ileal pouch cancer was detected 33 years after surgery for ulcerative colitis, highlighting the need for long-term surveillance.
Contribution
Reports a long-term case of ileal pouch cancer after restorative proctocolectomy, emphasizing the importance of surveillance.
Findings
Ileal pouch cancer can occur more than 30 years after restorative proctocolectomy for UC.
Endoscopic surveillance is crucial for early detection and treatment of ileal pouch cancer.
The case highlights the progression from low-grade dysplasia to adenocarcinoma over time.
Abstract
The standard surgical treatment for ulcerative colitis (UC) is proctocolectomy with hand-sewn ileoanal pouch anastomosis (hand-sewn IPAA) or stapled ileal pouch anastomosis (stapled IPAA). The occurrence of cancer in the ileal pouch after surgery for UC is rare, and a consensus on surveillance for ileal pouch cancer has not been reached. We report a case of ileal pouch cancer diagnosed by pouchoscopy 33 years after restorative proctocolectomy with IPAA for UC. A middle-aged man presented with positive fecal occult blood. The patient had undergone restorative proctocolectomy with IPAA for UC 33 years ago. Pouchoscopy had been performed every 2–3 years in the last 10 years. In April a year ago, he tested positive for fecal occult blood, and pouchoscopy revealed an ulcerative lesion and flat elevation in the ileal pouch on the proximal side of the ileoanal anastomosis. Targeted biopsies…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiverticular Disease and Complications · Inflammatory Bowel Disease · Gastrointestinal disorders and treatments
