# Resection of large, broad-based pedunculated and semi-pedunculated colorectal polyps using a scissor-type endoscopic submucosal dissection knife

**Authors:** Robert Eckersley, Noriko Suzuki, Brian Saunders, Adam Humphries

PMC · DOI: 10.1055/a-2788-3249 · 2026-01-29

## TL;DR

A new endoscopic tool called ST-ESD knife was found to be safe and effective for removing large colorectal polyps that are difficult to treat with traditional methods.

## Contribution

The study introduces and evaluates the use of a scissor-type endoscopic submucosal dissection knife for challenging colorectal polyps.

## Key findings

- ST-ESD achieved successful en bloc resection in 89.7% of cases with no major complications.
- All successful resections were R0 (complete removal) and showed no recurrence in follow-up.
- Only one case required surgery due to high-risk features, with no malignancy found in abandoned cases.

## Abstract

Endoscopic resection of large, broad-based pedunculated and semi-pedunculated polyps can be technically difficult. Conventional snare resection risks immediate bleeding and piecemeal excision. We evaluated the safety and efficacy of a scissor-type endoscopic submucosal dissection (ST-ESD) knife for these lesions.

A single-center retrospective study was conducted of all patients who underwent ST-ESD resection of pedunculated or semi-pedunculated polyps with head size ≧ 20 mm and stalk width ≧ 10 mm. Primary outcomes were en bloc resection, intraprocedural and delayed bleeding, and perforation. Secondary outcomes were R0 resection and recurrence at first follow-up.

Fifty-eight resections were identified (75.6% male; median age 60 years). Median head size was 30 mm (range 20–70) with median stalk width 15 mm (range 10–50). Of them, 74.1% were in the sigmoid colon. Successful resection was achieved in 52 of 58 (89.7%); 44 (75.9%) by ST-ESD alone and eight (13.8%) snare-assisted. Six (10.3%) were abandoned; five due to visible muscle retraction and one dense stalk fibrosis. All successful resections were en bloc with R0 in 52 of 52 (100%). Minor intraprocedural bleeding occurred in nine of 58 (15.5%) and was controlled endoscopically. Forty-seven of 52 defects (90.4%) were closed prophylactically with endoscopic clips. There were no incidences of delayed bleeding or perforation. Histopathology was benign in 51 of 52 (98.1%). One adenocarcinoma was treated surgically for high-risk features. Endoscopic follow-up was available in 41 of 52 (78.8%) with no recurrence seen. Zero of six abandoned cases referred for surgery contained evidence of malignancy in the surgical specimen.

ST-ESD is safe and effective for resection of large, broad-based pedunculated and semi-pedunculated colorectal polyps.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** adenocarcinoma (MONDO:0004970)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** fibrosis (MESH:D005355), malignancy (MESH:D009369), adenocarcinoma (MESH:D000230), bleeding (MESH:D006470), colorectal polyps (MESH:D003111), polyps (MESH:D011127)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12908908