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Endoscopic Surveillance and Treatment of Upper GI Tract Lesions in Patients with Familial Adenomatous Polyposis—A New Perspective on an Old Disease

Jacek Paszkowski, Paweł Samborski, Marcin Kucharski, Jarosław Cwaliński, Tomasz Banasiewicz, Andrzej Pławski

2022Genes11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

) gene. Patients with FAP develop up to thousands of colorectal adenomas as well as lesions in the upper GI tract. In FAP, the upper digestive lesions include gastric fundic gland polyps (FGPs), antrum adenomas, duodenal or small intestinal adenomas, and carcinoma. Patients, after colectomy, are still at significant risk for extracolonic malignancies. Advances in endoscope resolution and optical enhancement technologies allow endoscopists to provide assessments of benign and malignant polyps. For this reason, in the past decades, endoscopic resection techniques have become the first line of treatment in patients with polyps in the upper GI, whereby polyps and even early cancers can be successfully cured. In FAP patients, endoscopic ampullectomy appears to be a safe and effective way of treating patients with ampullary tumors. According to current indications, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) and stenting of the main pancreatic duct follow ampullectomy.

Topics & Concepts

Familial adenomatous polyposisMedicineGastroenterologyAdenomatous polyposis coliInternal medicineEndoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatographyMajor duodenal papillaAdenocarcinomaEndoscopic mucosal resectionEndoscopyColorectal cancerPancreatitisCancerGenetic factors in colorectal cancerGastric Cancer Management and OutcomesColorectal Cancer Treatments and Studies
Endoscopic Surveillance and Treatment of Upper GI Tract Lesions in Patients with Familial Adenomatous Polyposis—A New Perspective on an Old Disease | Litcius