Journal of the Anus, Rectum and Colon (Oct 2019)

Comparison of the histopathological characteristics of large colorectal laterally spreading tumors according to growth pattern

  • Tomoya Saito,
  • Kiyonori Kobayashi,
  • Miwa Sada,
  • Yasuhiro Matsumoto,
  • Miyuki Mukae,
  • Kana Kawagishi,
  • Kaoru Yokoyama,
  • Wasaburo Koizumi,
  • Makoto Saegusa,
  • Yoshitaka Murakami

DOI
https://doi.org/10.23922/jarc.2018-036
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 4
pp. 152 – 159

Abstract

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Objectives: Colorectal laterally spreading tumors (LSTs) are widely recognized owing to their structural characteristics. This study aims to clarify the histopathological characteristics of large colorectal LSTs according to growth pattern. Methods: We studied 297 colorectal LSTs measuring 20 mm in diameter. The LSTs were classified into four types: granular homogenous type (LST-G-H), granular nodular mixed type (LST-G-M), non-granular flat elevated type (LST-NG-F), and non-granular pseudo-depressed type (LST-NG-PD). Retrospectively collected data were examined to compare the histopathological characteristics of LSTs according to the growth pattern. Results: LST-G-M lesions (142 lesions) were most common, followed by LST-NG-F (74 lesions), LST-G-H (61 lesions), and LST-NG-PD (20 lesions). The mean tumor diameter of LST-G lesions (38.5 ± 17.2 mm) was significantly greater than that of LST-NG lesions (26.3 ± 7.0 mm, P < 0.001). In particular, 45% of LST-G-M lesions were 40 mm in diameter. Adenomas accounted for 54% of LST-G-H lesions compared with only 10% of LST-NG-PD lesions. Pathological T1 carcinomas accounted for 55% of LST-NG-PD lesions and were not found among LST-G-H lesions. Conclusions: The biological malignancy of colorectal LSTs differs considerably depending on the growth pattern even among large lesions and therefore should be considered when selecting treatment regimens.

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