Department of Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, Groote Schuur Hospital and University of Cape Town, South Africa.
S Afr Med J. 2020 Nov 27;110(12):1191-1194. doi: 10.7196/SAMJ.2020.v110i12.14582.
There is a lack of data on the frequency and pattern of colorectal adenomas in sub-Saharan Africa to guide diagnostic and preventive strategies for colorectal cancer (CRC) in the region.
To describe polyp characteristics and adenoma frequency in patients at average risk of CRC, who are undergoing colonoscopy for bowel symptoms at a tertiary hospital in South Africa (SA).
Colonoscopy records from the prospective endoscopy database at Groote Schuur Hospital, Cape Town, SA, from 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 (ADR). Age, gender, ethnicity, symptoms, bowel preparation and caecal intubation rates were also compared between patients with adenomas and those without.
Of 1 334 colonoscopies, 342 were performed in patients at increased risk of premalignant lesions; these were excluded from the 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%) or Asian (1%). The quality of bowel preparation and caecal intubation rate were similar between patients with polyps and those without. Patients with polyps were older than those without polyps (mean age 61.5 (standard deviation 12.9) v. 56.3 (17.4) years; p<0.002). On histological examination of these polyps, 119 were adenomas, 26 were hyperplastic and 27 were normal. The majority of the adenomas were tubular (80%), and there were only 6% with high-grade dysplasia. Half (51%) of the adenomas were in the proximal colon, and the overall ADR was 12%. The ADR (prevalence) was highest in white and Asian South Africans (18% each), followed by that in persons of mixed race (13%), but much lower in black Africans (5%).
This study provides a benchmark ADR 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.
撒哈拉以南非洲地区缺乏结直肠腺瘤的频率和模式数据,无法为该地区的结直肠癌(CRC)诊断和预防策略提供指导。
描述在南非(SA)一家三级医院因肠道症状行结肠镜检查的 CRC 平均风险患者的息肉特征和腺瘤频率。
检索 2014 年 8 月至 2017 年 2 月开普敦格罗特舒尔医院前瞻性内镜数据库中的结肠镜检查记录。分析息肉的存在及其形态、大小、部位和数量与种族、症状和结肠镜检查质量指标的关系。从实验室记录中获得组织学类型和分级,并进行分析。主要终点是腺瘤检出率(ADR)。还比较了腺瘤患者和无腺瘤患者的年龄、性别、种族、症状、肠道准备和盲肠插管率。
在 1334 例结肠镜检查中,342 例在有癌前病变风险的患者中进行;这些患者被排除在分析之外。在其余 992 例患者中,有 172 例(17.3%)发现了息肉,他们自报的种族为混血(76%)、白人(12%)、黑非洲人(11%)或亚洲人(1%)。有息肉和无息肉患者的肠道准备质量和盲肠插管率相似。有息肉的患者比没有息肉的患者年龄更大(平均年龄 61.5(标准差 12.9)岁比 56.3(17.4)岁;p<0.002)。对这些息肉的组织学检查发现,119 个为腺瘤,26 个为增生性息肉,27 个为正常。大多数腺瘤为管状(80%),仅有 6%为高级别异型增生。一半(51%)的腺瘤位于近端结肠,总体 ADR 为 12%。白人(18%)和亚洲人(18%)南非人中的 ADR(患病率)最高,其次是混血人(13%),而黑人(5%)中的 ADR 则低得多。
本研究为我们的集水区人群提供了一个 ADR 基准,可能也适用于整个非洲。有证据表明,根据种族,结直肠腺瘤的风险存在差异,在南非黑人中发现的腺瘤较少。