PLoS ONE (Jan 2023)

Serrated polyps in patients with ulcerative colitis: Unique clinicopathological and biological characteristics.

  • Masafumi Nishio,
  • Reiko Kunisaki,
  • Wataru Shibata,
  • Yoichi Ajioka,
  • Kingo Hirasawa,
  • Akiko Takase,
  • Sawako Chiba,
  • Yoshiaki Inayama,
  • Wataru Ueda,
  • Kiyotaka Okawa,
  • Haruka Otake,
  • Tsuyoshi Ogashiwa,
  • Hiroto Kinoshita,
  • Yusuke Saigusa,
  • Hideaki Kimura,
  • Jun Kato,
  • Shin Maeda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0282204
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 2
p. e0282204

Abstract

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BackgroundSerrated polyps have recently been reported in patients with ulcerative colitis (UC); however, their prevalence and detailed characteristics remain unclear.MethodsThe prevalence and clinicopathological and biological characteristics of serrated polyps in patients with UC were retrospectively examined in a single tertiary inflammatory bowel disease center in Japan from 2000 to 2020.ResultsAmong 2035 patients with UC who underwent total colonoscopy, 252 neoplasms, including 36 serrated polyps (26 in colitis-affected segments, 10 in colitis-unaffected segments), were identified in 187 patients with UC. The proportion of serrated polyps was 1.8% (36/2035). Serrated polyps in colitis-affected segments were common with extensive colitis (88%), history of persistent active colitis (58%), and long UC duration (12.1 years). Serrated polyps in colitis-affected segments were more common in men (88%). Of the 26 serrated polyps in colitis-affected segments, 15, 6, and 5 were categorized as sessile serrated lesion-like dysplasia, traditional serrated adenoma-like dysplasia, and serrated dysplasia not otherwise specified, respectively. Sessile serrated lesion-like dysplasia was common in the proximal colon (67%) and with BRAF mutation (62%), whereas traditional serrated adenoma-like dysplasia and serrated dysplasia not otherwise specified were common in the distal colon (100% and 80%, respectively) and with KRAS mutations (100% and 75%, respectively).ConclusionsSerrated polyps comprised 14% of the neoplasias in patients with UC. Serrated polyps in colitis-affected segments were common in men with extensive and longstanding colitis, suggesting chronic inflammation in the development of serrated polyps in patients with UC.