LYMPH NODE METASTASES FROM CARCINOMAS DEVELOPING IN PEDUNCULATED AND SEMIPEDUNCULATED COLORECTAL ADENOMAS
- 1 October 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Anz Journal of Surgery
- Vol. 51 (5), 429-433
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1445-2197.1981.tb05977.x
Abstract
Intramucosal carcinomas do not metastasise, but 5% to 10% of patients with submucosal cancers show lymph node involvement. Some of these submucosal cancers occur in pedunculated or semipedunculated polyps, which are usually treated by endoscopic polypectomy. Of 214 colorectal polyps removed endoscopically at the Keio University Hospital from 1976 to 1979, six showed submucosal invasive carcinoma. All six patients were subjected to colon resection, and two were found to have lymph node metastases. Consideration of these cases and of the literature suggests that resection is necessary after endoscopic polypectomy when there is carcinoma at the cut end, massive carcinomatous invasion of the neck of the polyp, lymphatic involvement, or poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Policy of local excision for early cancer of the colorectum.Gut, 1977
- Metastasis from a pedunculated adenomatous colonic polyp with focally invasive carcinomaDiseases of the Colon & Rectum, 1975
- III. Lymphatic Spread of Rectal Cancer and its Effect on PrognosisNihon Daicho Komonbyo Gakkai Zasshi, 1975
- Factors in Early Cancer which Influence the PrognosisProceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine, 1966
- Pedunculated adenomatous polyp with carcinoma in the tip and metastasis to lymph nodesDiseases of the Colon & Rectum, 1965
- Adenomas and the pathogenesis of cancer of the colon and rectumDiseases of the Colon & Rectum, 1959