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The prevalence and characteristics of incidental colorectal polyps in patients undergoing colonoscopy at a South African tertiary institution

Background There is a lack of data on the frequency, and pattern of colorectal adenomas in subSaharan Africa, to guide diagnostic and preventative strategies for CRC in the region. This study aimed to describe polyp characteristics, and adenoma frequency in patients at average risk of CRC undergoing...

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Main Author: Kruger, Jean-Jacques
Other Authors: Thomson, Sandie
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Medicine 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Kruger, Jean-Jacques
author2 Thomson, Sandie
author_browse Kruger, Jean-Jacques
Thomson, Sandie
author_facet Thomson, Sandie
Kruger, Jean-Jacques
author_sort Kruger, Jean-Jacques
collection Thesis
description Background There is a lack of data on the frequency, and pattern of colorectal adenomas in subSaharan Africa, to guide diagnostic and preventative strategies for CRC in the region. This study aimed to describe polyp characteristics, and adenoma frequency in patients at average risk of CRC undergoing colonoscopy for bowel symptoms at a tertiary hospital in South Africa. Methods Colonoscopy records from the prospective endoscopy database at Groote Schuur Hospital for the period August 2014 to February 2017 were retrieved. The presence of polyps, and their morphology, size, site and number in relation to ethnicity, symptoms, and colonoscopy quality indicators were analysed. The histological type and grade were obtained from laboratory records, and analysed. The primary endpoint was the adenoma detection rate. Age, gender, ethnicity, symptoms, bowel preparation, and caecal intubation rates were also compared between patients with adenomas, and those without adenomas. Results Of 1334 colonoscopies, 342 were in patients at increased risk of premalignant lesions, and these were excluded from analysis. Polyps were identified in 172 of the remaining 992 patients (17.3%), whose self-declared ethnicity was: mixed race 76%, white 12%, black African 11%, and Asian 1%. The quality of the bowel preparation and caecal intubation rate was similar between patients with polyps and those without. Individuals with polyps were older than those without polyps (mean age 61. 5 ±12,9 versus 56.3 ±17,4 years, p< 0.002). On histology of these polyps, 119 were adenomas, 26 hyperplastic and 27 normal. The majority of the adenomas were tubular (80%), and only 6% had high grade dysplasia. Half (51%) of the adenomas were in the proximal colon, and the overall adenoma detection rate was 12%. The adenoma detection rate (prevalence) was highest in white, and Asian South Africans (18% each), followed by mixed race (13%), and much lower in black South Africans (5%). Conclusions This study provides a benchmark adenoma detection rate for our catchment population and potentially across Africa. There is evidence of a continuing differential colorectal neoplasia risk according to ethnicity, with fewer adenomas being detected in black South Africans.
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37832 The prevalence and characteristics of incidental colorectal polyps in patients undergoing colonoscopy at a South African tertiary institution Kruger, Jean-Jacques Thomson, Sandie Medicine Background There is a lack of data on the frequency, and pattern of colorectal adenomas in subSaharan Africa, to guide diagnostic and preventative strategies for CRC in the region. This study aimed to describe polyp characteristics, and adenoma frequency in patients at average risk of CRC undergoing colonoscopy for bowel symptoms at a tertiary hospital in South Africa. Methods Colonoscopy records from the prospective endoscopy database at Groote Schuur Hospital for the period August 2014 to February 2017 were retrieved. The presence of polyps, and their morphology, size, site and number in relation to ethnicity, symptoms, and colonoscopy quality indicators were analysed. The histological type and grade were obtained from laboratory records, and analysed. The primary endpoint was the adenoma detection rate. Age, gender, ethnicity, symptoms, bowel preparation, and caecal intubation rates were also compared between patients with adenomas, and those without adenomas. Results Of 1334 colonoscopies, 342 were in patients at increased risk of premalignant lesions, and these were excluded from analysis. Polyps were identified in 172 of the remaining 992 patients (17.3%), whose self-declared ethnicity was: mixed race 76%, white 12%, black African 11%, and Asian 1%. The quality of the bowel preparation and caecal intubation rate was similar between patients with polyps and those without. Individuals with polyps were older than those without polyps (mean age 61. 5 ±12,9 versus 56.3 ±17,4 years, p< 0.002). On histology of these polyps, 119 were adenomas, 26 hyperplastic and 27 normal. The majority of the adenomas were tubular (80%), and only 6% had high grade dysplasia. Half (51%) of the adenomas were in the proximal colon, and the overall adenoma detection rate was 12%. The adenoma detection rate (prevalence) was highest in white, and Asian South Africans (18% each), followed by mixed race (13%), and much lower in black South Africans (5%). Conclusions This study provides a benchmark adenoma detection rate for our catchment population and potentially across Africa. There is evidence of a continuing differential colorectal neoplasia risk according to ethnicity, with fewer adenomas being detected in black South Africans. 2023-04-26T11:02:07Z 2023-04-26T11:02:07Z 2022 2023-04-21T08:54:15Z Master Thesis Masters MMed http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37832 eng application/pdf Department of Medicine Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Medicine
Kruger, Jean-Jacques
The prevalence and characteristics of incidental colorectal polyps in patients undergoing colonoscopy at a South African tertiary institution
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The prevalence and characteristics of incidental colorectal polyps in patients undergoing colonoscopy at a South African tertiary institution
title_full The prevalence and characteristics of incidental colorectal polyps in patients undergoing colonoscopy at a South African tertiary institution
title_fullStr The prevalence and characteristics of incidental colorectal polyps in patients undergoing colonoscopy at a South African tertiary institution
title_full_unstemmed The prevalence and characteristics of incidental colorectal polyps in patients undergoing colonoscopy at a South African tertiary institution
title_short The prevalence and characteristics of incidental colorectal polyps in patients undergoing colonoscopy at a South African tertiary institution
title_sort prevalence and characteristics of incidental colorectal polyps in patients undergoing colonoscopy at a south african tertiary institution
topic Medicine
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37832
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