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The Extra-Bacterial Gut Ecosystem: The Influence of Phages and Fungi in the Microbiome
WASHINGTON, DC — Research on the gut microbiome — and clinical attention to it — has focused mainly on bacteria, but bacteriophages and fungi play critical roles as well, with significant influences on health and disease, experts said at the Gut Microbiota for Health (GMFH) World Summit 2025.
Fungi account for < 1% of the total genetic material in the microbiome but 1%-2% of its total biomass. “Despite their relative rarity, they have an important and outsized influence on gut health” — an impact that results from their unique interface with the immune system, said Kyla Ost, PhD, of the Anschutz Medical Campus, University of Colorado, in Denver, whose research focuses on this interface.
And bacteriophages — viruses that infect and kill bacteria — are highly abundant in the gut. “Bacteriophages begin to colonize our GI [gastrointestinal] tract at the same time we develop our own microbiome shortly after birth, and from that time on, they interact with the bacteria in our GI tract, shaping [and being shaped by] the bacterial species we carry with us,” said Robert (Chip) Schooley, MD, distinguished professor of medicine at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine.
“We’ve been talking about things that affect the gut microbiome — diet, genetics, immune response — but probably the biggest influence on what grows in the GI tract are bacteriophages,” said Schooley, co-director of the Center for Innovative Phage Applications and Therapeutics, in a session on the extra-bacterial gut ecosystem.
Among the current questions:
‘New life’ for Phage Therapy
Bacteriophages represent a promising approach for the treatment of multidrug resistant bacterial pathogens in an era of increasing resistance and a dried-up antibiotic discovery pipeline, Schooley said. (In 2019, an estimated 4.95 million deaths around the world were associated with bacterial antimicrobial resistance, and by 2050, it has been forecast that this number will rise to an estimated 8.22 million deaths.)
But in addition to suppressing bacterial pathogens causing direct morbidity, phage therapy has the potential to suppress bacteria believed to contribute to chronic diseases, he said. “We have proof-of-concept studies about the ability of phage to modulate bacteria in the digestive tract,” and an increasing number of clinical trials of the use of phages in GI and other diseases are underway, he said.
Phages were discovered just over a century ago, but phage therapy was widely abandoned once antibiotics were developed, except for in Russia and the former Eastern Bloc countries, where phage therapy continued to be used.
Phage therapy “got new life” in the West, Schooley said, about 10-15 years ago with an increasing number of detailed and high-profile case reports, including one in which a UC San Diego colleague, Tom Patterson, PhD, contracted a deadly multidrug resistant bacterial infection in Egypt and was eventually saved with bacteriophage therapy. (The case was the subject of the book The Perfect Predator).
Since then, as described in case reports and studies in the literature, “hundreds of people have been treated with bacteriophages here and in Europe,” most commonly for pulmonary infections and infections in implanted vascular and orthopedic devices, said Schooley, who coauthored a review in Cell in 2023 that describes phage biology and advances and future directions in phage therapy.
The use of bacteriophages to prevent systemic infections during high-risk periods — such as during chemotherapeutic regimens for hematological regimens — is an area of interest, he said at the meeting.
In research that is making its way to a clinical trial of patients undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT), researchers screened a library of phages to identify those with broad coverage of Escherichia coli. Using tail fiber engineering and CRISPR technology, they then engineered a combination of the four most complementary bacteriophages to selectively kill E coli — including fluoroquinolone-resistant strains that, in patients whose GI tracts are colonized with these strains, can translocate from the gut into the bloodstream, causing sepsis, during chemotherapeutic regimens for HSCT.
In a mouse model, the CRISPR-enhanced four-phage cocktail (SNIPR001) led to a steady reduction in the E coli colony counts in stool, “showing you can modulate these bacteria in the gut by using bacteriophages to kill them,” Schooley said. Moreover, the CRISPR enhancement strengthened the phages’ ability to break up biofilms, he said, showing “that you can engineer bacteriophages to make them better killers.” A phase 1b/2a study is being planned.
Other Niches for Therapeutic Phages, Challenges
Bacteriophages also could be used to target a gut bacterium that has been shown to attenuate alcoholic liver disease. Patients with alcoholic hepatitis “have a gut microbiome that is different in distribution,” Schooley said, often with increased numbers of Enterococcus faecalis that produce cytolysin, an exotoxin that exacerbates liver injury and is associated with increased mortality.
In published research led by investigators at UC San Diego, stool from cytolysin-positive patients with alcoholic hepatitis was found to exacerbate ethanol-induced liver disease in gnotobiotic mice, and phage therapy against cytolytic E faecalis was found to abolish it, Schooley shared.
Research is also exploring the potential of phage therapy to selectively target adherent invasive E coli in Crohn’s disease, and Klebsiella pneumoniae in the gut microbiome as an exacerbator of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), he said.
And investigators in Japan, he noted, have reported that bacteriophage therapy against K pneumoniae can ameliorate liver inflammation and disease severity in primary sclerosing cholangitis.
Challenges in the therapeutic use of phages include the narrow host range of phages and an uncertain predictive value of in vitro phage susceptibility testing. “We don’t know yet how to do resistance testing as well as we do with antibiotics,” he said.
In addition, most phages tend to be acid labile, requiring strategies to mitigate inactivation by gastric acid, and there are “major knowledge gaps” relating to phage pharmacology. “We also know that adaptive immune responses to phages can but often doesn’t impact therapy, and we want to understand that better in clinical trials,” Schooley said.
Phages that have a “lysogenic” lifestyle — as opposed to lytic phages which are used therapeutically — can contribute to antibiotic resistance by facilitating the interchange of bacterial resistance genes, he noted.
A Window Into the Mycobiome
The human gut mycobiome is primarily composed of fungi in the Saccharomyces, Candida, and Malassezia genera, with Candida species dominating. Fungal cells harbor distinct immune-stimulatory molecules and activate distinct immune pathways compared with bacteria and other members of the microbiome, said Ost, assistant professor in the immunology and microbiology department of CU Anschutz.
Some fungi, including those in the Candida genus, activate adaptive and innate immune responses that promote metabolic health and protect against infection. A recently published study in Science, for instance, demonstrated that colonization with C dubliniensis in very young mice who had been exposed to broad-spectrum antibiotics promoted “the expansion and development of beta cells in the pancreas” in a macrophage dependent manner, improving metabolic health and reducing diabetes incidence, she shared.
On the one hand, fungi can “exacerbate and perpetuate the pathogenic inflammation that’s found in a growing list of inflammatory diseases” such as IBD. And “in fact, a lot of the benefits and detriments are driven by the exact same species of fungi,” said Ost. “This is particularly true of Candida,” which is a “lifelong colonizer of intestinal microbiota that rarely causes disease but can be quite pathogenic when it does.”
A 2023 review in Nature Reviews Gastroenterology & Hepatology coauthored by Ost describes the role of commensal fungi in intestinal diseases, including IBD, colorectal cancer, and pancreatic cancer.
The pathogenic potential of commensal fungi is largely dependent on its strain, its morphology and its expression of virulence factors, researchers are learning. Ost has studied C albicans, which has been associated with intestinal inflammation and IBD. Like some other Candida species, C albicans are “fascinating shape shifters,” she said, transitioning between a less pathogenic “yeast” morphology and an elongated, adhesive “hyphae” shape that is more pathogenic.
It turns out, according to research by Ost and others, that the C albicans hyphal morphotype — and the adhesins (sticky proteins that facilitate adherence to epithelial cells) and a cytolytic toxin it produces — are preferentially targeted and suppressed by immunoglobulin A (IgA) in the gut.
“Our gut is protected by a large quantity of IgA antibodies…and these IgA interact with the microbiota and play a big role in what microbes are there and the biology of the microbes,” Ost said. Indeed, symptomatic IgA deficiency in humans has been shown to be associated with C albicans overgrowth.
Leveraging the hyphal-specific IgA response to protect against disease seems possible, she said, referring to an experimental anti-Candida fungal vaccine (NDV-3A) designed to induce an adhesin-specific immune response. In a mouse model of colitis, the vaccine protected against C albicans-associated damage. “We saw an immediate IgA response that targeted C albicans in the intestinal contents,” Ost said.
C glabrata, which has also been associated with intestinal inflammation and IBD, does not form hyphae but — depending on the strain — may also induce intestinal IgA responses, she said in describing her recent research.
Ost reported having no disclosures. Schooley disclosed being a consultant for SNIPR Biome, BiomX, Locus, MicrobiotiX, Amazon Data Monitoring Committee: Merck.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
WASHINGTON, DC — Research on the gut microbiome — and clinical attention to it — has focused mainly on bacteria, but bacteriophages and fungi play critical roles as well, with significant influences on health and disease, experts said at the Gut Microbiota for Health (GMFH) World Summit 2025.
Fungi account for < 1% of the total genetic material in the microbiome but 1%-2% of its total biomass. “Despite their relative rarity, they have an important and outsized influence on gut health” — an impact that results from their unique interface with the immune system, said Kyla Ost, PhD, of the Anschutz Medical Campus, University of Colorado, in Denver, whose research focuses on this interface.
And bacteriophages — viruses that infect and kill bacteria — are highly abundant in the gut. “Bacteriophages begin to colonize our GI [gastrointestinal] tract at the same time we develop our own microbiome shortly after birth, and from that time on, they interact with the bacteria in our GI tract, shaping [and being shaped by] the bacterial species we carry with us,” said Robert (Chip) Schooley, MD, distinguished professor of medicine at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine.
“We’ve been talking about things that affect the gut microbiome — diet, genetics, immune response — but probably the biggest influence on what grows in the GI tract are bacteriophages,” said Schooley, co-director of the Center for Innovative Phage Applications and Therapeutics, in a session on the extra-bacterial gut ecosystem.
Among the current questions:
‘New life’ for Phage Therapy
Bacteriophages represent a promising approach for the treatment of multidrug resistant bacterial pathogens in an era of increasing resistance and a dried-up antibiotic discovery pipeline, Schooley said. (In 2019, an estimated 4.95 million deaths around the world were associated with bacterial antimicrobial resistance, and by 2050, it has been forecast that this number will rise to an estimated 8.22 million deaths.)
But in addition to suppressing bacterial pathogens causing direct morbidity, phage therapy has the potential to suppress bacteria believed to contribute to chronic diseases, he said. “We have proof-of-concept studies about the ability of phage to modulate bacteria in the digestive tract,” and an increasing number of clinical trials of the use of phages in GI and other diseases are underway, he said.
Phages were discovered just over a century ago, but phage therapy was widely abandoned once antibiotics were developed, except for in Russia and the former Eastern Bloc countries, where phage therapy continued to be used.
Phage therapy “got new life” in the West, Schooley said, about 10-15 years ago with an increasing number of detailed and high-profile case reports, including one in which a UC San Diego colleague, Tom Patterson, PhD, contracted a deadly multidrug resistant bacterial infection in Egypt and was eventually saved with bacteriophage therapy. (The case was the subject of the book The Perfect Predator).
Since then, as described in case reports and studies in the literature, “hundreds of people have been treated with bacteriophages here and in Europe,” most commonly for pulmonary infections and infections in implanted vascular and orthopedic devices, said Schooley, who coauthored a review in Cell in 2023 that describes phage biology and advances and future directions in phage therapy.
The use of bacteriophages to prevent systemic infections during high-risk periods — such as during chemotherapeutic regimens for hematological regimens — is an area of interest, he said at the meeting.
In research that is making its way to a clinical trial of patients undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT), researchers screened a library of phages to identify those with broad coverage of Escherichia coli. Using tail fiber engineering and CRISPR technology, they then engineered a combination of the four most complementary bacteriophages to selectively kill E coli — including fluoroquinolone-resistant strains that, in patients whose GI tracts are colonized with these strains, can translocate from the gut into the bloodstream, causing sepsis, during chemotherapeutic regimens for HSCT.
In a mouse model, the CRISPR-enhanced four-phage cocktail (SNIPR001) led to a steady reduction in the E coli colony counts in stool, “showing you can modulate these bacteria in the gut by using bacteriophages to kill them,” Schooley said. Moreover, the CRISPR enhancement strengthened the phages’ ability to break up biofilms, he said, showing “that you can engineer bacteriophages to make them better killers.” A phase 1b/2a study is being planned.
Other Niches for Therapeutic Phages, Challenges
Bacteriophages also could be used to target a gut bacterium that has been shown to attenuate alcoholic liver disease. Patients with alcoholic hepatitis “have a gut microbiome that is different in distribution,” Schooley said, often with increased numbers of Enterococcus faecalis that produce cytolysin, an exotoxin that exacerbates liver injury and is associated with increased mortality.
In published research led by investigators at UC San Diego, stool from cytolysin-positive patients with alcoholic hepatitis was found to exacerbate ethanol-induced liver disease in gnotobiotic mice, and phage therapy against cytolytic E faecalis was found to abolish it, Schooley shared.
Research is also exploring the potential of phage therapy to selectively target adherent invasive E coli in Crohn’s disease, and Klebsiella pneumoniae in the gut microbiome as an exacerbator of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), he said.
And investigators in Japan, he noted, have reported that bacteriophage therapy against K pneumoniae can ameliorate liver inflammation and disease severity in primary sclerosing cholangitis.
Challenges in the therapeutic use of phages include the narrow host range of phages and an uncertain predictive value of in vitro phage susceptibility testing. “We don’t know yet how to do resistance testing as well as we do with antibiotics,” he said.
In addition, most phages tend to be acid labile, requiring strategies to mitigate inactivation by gastric acid, and there are “major knowledge gaps” relating to phage pharmacology. “We also know that adaptive immune responses to phages can but often doesn’t impact therapy, and we want to understand that better in clinical trials,” Schooley said.
Phages that have a “lysogenic” lifestyle — as opposed to lytic phages which are used therapeutically — can contribute to antibiotic resistance by facilitating the interchange of bacterial resistance genes, he noted.
A Window Into the Mycobiome
The human gut mycobiome is primarily composed of fungi in the Saccharomyces, Candida, and Malassezia genera, with Candida species dominating. Fungal cells harbor distinct immune-stimulatory molecules and activate distinct immune pathways compared with bacteria and other members of the microbiome, said Ost, assistant professor in the immunology and microbiology department of CU Anschutz.
Some fungi, including those in the Candida genus, activate adaptive and innate immune responses that promote metabolic health and protect against infection. A recently published study in Science, for instance, demonstrated that colonization with C dubliniensis in very young mice who had been exposed to broad-spectrum antibiotics promoted “the expansion and development of beta cells in the pancreas” in a macrophage dependent manner, improving metabolic health and reducing diabetes incidence, she shared.
On the one hand, fungi can “exacerbate and perpetuate the pathogenic inflammation that’s found in a growing list of inflammatory diseases” such as IBD. And “in fact, a lot of the benefits and detriments are driven by the exact same species of fungi,” said Ost. “This is particularly true of Candida,” which is a “lifelong colonizer of intestinal microbiota that rarely causes disease but can be quite pathogenic when it does.”
A 2023 review in Nature Reviews Gastroenterology & Hepatology coauthored by Ost describes the role of commensal fungi in intestinal diseases, including IBD, colorectal cancer, and pancreatic cancer.
The pathogenic potential of commensal fungi is largely dependent on its strain, its morphology and its expression of virulence factors, researchers are learning. Ost has studied C albicans, which has been associated with intestinal inflammation and IBD. Like some other Candida species, C albicans are “fascinating shape shifters,” she said, transitioning between a less pathogenic “yeast” morphology and an elongated, adhesive “hyphae” shape that is more pathogenic.
It turns out, according to research by Ost and others, that the C albicans hyphal morphotype — and the adhesins (sticky proteins that facilitate adherence to epithelial cells) and a cytolytic toxin it produces — are preferentially targeted and suppressed by immunoglobulin A (IgA) in the gut.
“Our gut is protected by a large quantity of IgA antibodies…and these IgA interact with the microbiota and play a big role in what microbes are there and the biology of the microbes,” Ost said. Indeed, symptomatic IgA deficiency in humans has been shown to be associated with C albicans overgrowth.
Leveraging the hyphal-specific IgA response to protect against disease seems possible, she said, referring to an experimental anti-Candida fungal vaccine (NDV-3A) designed to induce an adhesin-specific immune response. In a mouse model of colitis, the vaccine protected against C albicans-associated damage. “We saw an immediate IgA response that targeted C albicans in the intestinal contents,” Ost said.
C glabrata, which has also been associated with intestinal inflammation and IBD, does not form hyphae but — depending on the strain — may also induce intestinal IgA responses, she said in describing her recent research.
Ost reported having no disclosures. Schooley disclosed being a consultant for SNIPR Biome, BiomX, Locus, MicrobiotiX, Amazon Data Monitoring Committee: Merck.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
WASHINGTON, DC — Research on the gut microbiome — and clinical attention to it — has focused mainly on bacteria, but bacteriophages and fungi play critical roles as well, with significant influences on health and disease, experts said at the Gut Microbiota for Health (GMFH) World Summit 2025.
Fungi account for < 1% of the total genetic material in the microbiome but 1%-2% of its total biomass. “Despite their relative rarity, they have an important and outsized influence on gut health” — an impact that results from their unique interface with the immune system, said Kyla Ost, PhD, of the Anschutz Medical Campus, University of Colorado, in Denver, whose research focuses on this interface.
And bacteriophages — viruses that infect and kill bacteria — are highly abundant in the gut. “Bacteriophages begin to colonize our GI [gastrointestinal] tract at the same time we develop our own microbiome shortly after birth, and from that time on, they interact with the bacteria in our GI tract, shaping [and being shaped by] the bacterial species we carry with us,” said Robert (Chip) Schooley, MD, distinguished professor of medicine at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine.
“We’ve been talking about things that affect the gut microbiome — diet, genetics, immune response — but probably the biggest influence on what grows in the GI tract are bacteriophages,” said Schooley, co-director of the Center for Innovative Phage Applications and Therapeutics, in a session on the extra-bacterial gut ecosystem.
Among the current questions:
‘New life’ for Phage Therapy
Bacteriophages represent a promising approach for the treatment of multidrug resistant bacterial pathogens in an era of increasing resistance and a dried-up antibiotic discovery pipeline, Schooley said. (In 2019, an estimated 4.95 million deaths around the world were associated with bacterial antimicrobial resistance, and by 2050, it has been forecast that this number will rise to an estimated 8.22 million deaths.)
But in addition to suppressing bacterial pathogens causing direct morbidity, phage therapy has the potential to suppress bacteria believed to contribute to chronic diseases, he said. “We have proof-of-concept studies about the ability of phage to modulate bacteria in the digestive tract,” and an increasing number of clinical trials of the use of phages in GI and other diseases are underway, he said.
Phages were discovered just over a century ago, but phage therapy was widely abandoned once antibiotics were developed, except for in Russia and the former Eastern Bloc countries, where phage therapy continued to be used.
Phage therapy “got new life” in the West, Schooley said, about 10-15 years ago with an increasing number of detailed and high-profile case reports, including one in which a UC San Diego colleague, Tom Patterson, PhD, contracted a deadly multidrug resistant bacterial infection in Egypt and was eventually saved with bacteriophage therapy. (The case was the subject of the book The Perfect Predator).
Since then, as described in case reports and studies in the literature, “hundreds of people have been treated with bacteriophages here and in Europe,” most commonly for pulmonary infections and infections in implanted vascular and orthopedic devices, said Schooley, who coauthored a review in Cell in 2023 that describes phage biology and advances and future directions in phage therapy.
The use of bacteriophages to prevent systemic infections during high-risk periods — such as during chemotherapeutic regimens for hematological regimens — is an area of interest, he said at the meeting.
In research that is making its way to a clinical trial of patients undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT), researchers screened a library of phages to identify those with broad coverage of Escherichia coli. Using tail fiber engineering and CRISPR technology, they then engineered a combination of the four most complementary bacteriophages to selectively kill E coli — including fluoroquinolone-resistant strains that, in patients whose GI tracts are colonized with these strains, can translocate from the gut into the bloodstream, causing sepsis, during chemotherapeutic regimens for HSCT.
In a mouse model, the CRISPR-enhanced four-phage cocktail (SNIPR001) led to a steady reduction in the E coli colony counts in stool, “showing you can modulate these bacteria in the gut by using bacteriophages to kill them,” Schooley said. Moreover, the CRISPR enhancement strengthened the phages’ ability to break up biofilms, he said, showing “that you can engineer bacteriophages to make them better killers.” A phase 1b/2a study is being planned.
Other Niches for Therapeutic Phages, Challenges
Bacteriophages also could be used to target a gut bacterium that has been shown to attenuate alcoholic liver disease. Patients with alcoholic hepatitis “have a gut microbiome that is different in distribution,” Schooley said, often with increased numbers of Enterococcus faecalis that produce cytolysin, an exotoxin that exacerbates liver injury and is associated with increased mortality.
In published research led by investigators at UC San Diego, stool from cytolysin-positive patients with alcoholic hepatitis was found to exacerbate ethanol-induced liver disease in gnotobiotic mice, and phage therapy against cytolytic E faecalis was found to abolish it, Schooley shared.
Research is also exploring the potential of phage therapy to selectively target adherent invasive E coli in Crohn’s disease, and Klebsiella pneumoniae in the gut microbiome as an exacerbator of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), he said.
And investigators in Japan, he noted, have reported that bacteriophage therapy against K pneumoniae can ameliorate liver inflammation and disease severity in primary sclerosing cholangitis.
Challenges in the therapeutic use of phages include the narrow host range of phages and an uncertain predictive value of in vitro phage susceptibility testing. “We don’t know yet how to do resistance testing as well as we do with antibiotics,” he said.
In addition, most phages tend to be acid labile, requiring strategies to mitigate inactivation by gastric acid, and there are “major knowledge gaps” relating to phage pharmacology. “We also know that adaptive immune responses to phages can but often doesn’t impact therapy, and we want to understand that better in clinical trials,” Schooley said.
Phages that have a “lysogenic” lifestyle — as opposed to lytic phages which are used therapeutically — can contribute to antibiotic resistance by facilitating the interchange of bacterial resistance genes, he noted.
A Window Into the Mycobiome
The human gut mycobiome is primarily composed of fungi in the Saccharomyces, Candida, and Malassezia genera, with Candida species dominating. Fungal cells harbor distinct immune-stimulatory molecules and activate distinct immune pathways compared with bacteria and other members of the microbiome, said Ost, assistant professor in the immunology and microbiology department of CU Anschutz.
Some fungi, including those in the Candida genus, activate adaptive and innate immune responses that promote metabolic health and protect against infection. A recently published study in Science, for instance, demonstrated that colonization with C dubliniensis in very young mice who had been exposed to broad-spectrum antibiotics promoted “the expansion and development of beta cells in the pancreas” in a macrophage dependent manner, improving metabolic health and reducing diabetes incidence, she shared.
On the one hand, fungi can “exacerbate and perpetuate the pathogenic inflammation that’s found in a growing list of inflammatory diseases” such as IBD. And “in fact, a lot of the benefits and detriments are driven by the exact same species of fungi,” said Ost. “This is particularly true of Candida,” which is a “lifelong colonizer of intestinal microbiota that rarely causes disease but can be quite pathogenic when it does.”
A 2023 review in Nature Reviews Gastroenterology & Hepatology coauthored by Ost describes the role of commensal fungi in intestinal diseases, including IBD, colorectal cancer, and pancreatic cancer.
The pathogenic potential of commensal fungi is largely dependent on its strain, its morphology and its expression of virulence factors, researchers are learning. Ost has studied C albicans, which has been associated with intestinal inflammation and IBD. Like some other Candida species, C albicans are “fascinating shape shifters,” she said, transitioning between a less pathogenic “yeast” morphology and an elongated, adhesive “hyphae” shape that is more pathogenic.
It turns out, according to research by Ost and others, that the C albicans hyphal morphotype — and the adhesins (sticky proteins that facilitate adherence to epithelial cells) and a cytolytic toxin it produces — are preferentially targeted and suppressed by immunoglobulin A (IgA) in the gut.
“Our gut is protected by a large quantity of IgA antibodies…and these IgA interact with the microbiota and play a big role in what microbes are there and the biology of the microbes,” Ost said. Indeed, symptomatic IgA deficiency in humans has been shown to be associated with C albicans overgrowth.
Leveraging the hyphal-specific IgA response to protect against disease seems possible, she said, referring to an experimental anti-Candida fungal vaccine (NDV-3A) designed to induce an adhesin-specific immune response. In a mouse model of colitis, the vaccine protected against C albicans-associated damage. “We saw an immediate IgA response that targeted C albicans in the intestinal contents,” Ost said.
C glabrata, which has also been associated with intestinal inflammation and IBD, does not form hyphae but — depending on the strain — may also induce intestinal IgA responses, she said in describing her recent research.
Ost reported having no disclosures. Schooley disclosed being a consultant for SNIPR Biome, BiomX, Locus, MicrobiotiX, Amazon Data Monitoring Committee: Merck.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM GMFH 2025
Patient Navigation Boosts Follow-Up Colonoscopy Completion
The intervention led to a significant 13-point increase in follow-up colonoscopy completion at 1 year, compared with usual care (55.1% vs 42.1%), according the study, which was published online in Annals of Internal Medicine.
“Patients with an abnormal fecal test results have about a 1 in 20 chance of having colorectal cancer found, and many more will be found to have advanced adenomas that can be removed to prevent cancer,” Gloria Coronado, PhD, of Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research, Portland, Oregon, and University of Arizona Cancer Center, Tucson, said in an interview.
“It is critical that these patients get a follow-up colonoscopy,” she said. “Patient navigation can accomplish this goal.”
‘Highly Effective’ Intervention
Researchers compared the effectiveness of a patient navigation program with that of usual care outreach in increasing follow-up colonoscopy completion after an abnormal stool test. They also developed a risk-prediction model that calculated a patient’s probability of obtaining a follow-up colonoscopy without navigation to determine if the addition of this intervention had a greater impact on those determined to be less likely to follow through.
The study included 967 patients from a community health center in Washington State who received an abnormal fecal test result within the prior month. The mean age of participants was 61 years, approximately 45% were women and 77% were White, and 18% preferred a Spanish-language intervention. In total, 479 patients received the intervention and 488 received usual care.
The intervention was delivered by a patient navigator who mailed introductory letters, sent text messages, and made live phone calls. In the calls, the navigators addressed the topics of barrier assessment and resolution, bowel preparation instruction and reminders, colonoscopy check-in, and understanding colonoscopy results and retesting intervals.
Patients in the usual-care group were contacted by a referral coordinator to schedule a follow-up colonoscopy appointment. If they couldn’t be reached initially, up to two follow-up attempts were made at 30 and 45 days after the referral date.
Patient navigation resulted in a significant 13% increase in follow-up, and those in this group completed a colonoscopy 27 days sooner than those in the usual care group (mean, 229 days vs 256 days).
Contrary to the authors’ expectation, the effectiveness of the intervention did not vary by patients’ predicted likelihood of obtaining a colonoscopy without navigation.
Notably, 20.3% of patients were unreachable or lost to follow-up, and 29.7% did not receive navigation. Among the 479 patients assigned to navigation, 79 (16.5%) declined participation and 56 (11.7%) were never reached.
The study was primarily conducted during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, which created additional systemic and individual barriers to completing colonoscopies.
Nevertheless, the authors wrote, “our findings suggest that patient navigation is highly effective for patients eligible for colonoscopy.”
“Most patients who were reached were contacted with six or fewer phone attempts,” Coronado noted. “Further efforts are needed to determine how to reach and motivate patients [who did not participate] to get a follow-up colonoscopy.”
Coronado and colleagues are exploring ways to leverage artificial intelligence and virtual approaches to augment patient navigation programs — for example, by using a virtual navigator or low-cost automated tools to provide education to build patient confidence in getting a colonoscopy.
‘A Promising Tool’
“Colonoscopy completion after positive stool-based testing is critical to mitigating the impact of colon cancer,” commented Rajiv Bhuta, MD, assistant professor of clinical gastroenterology & hepatology, Lewis Katz School of Medicine, Temple University, Philadelphia, who was not involved in the study. “While prior studies assessing navigation have demonstrated improvements, none were as large enrollment-wise or as generalizable as the current study.”
That said, Bhuta said in an interview that the study could have provided more detail about coordination and communication with local gastrointestinal practices.
“Local ordering and prescribing practices vary and can significantly impact compliance rates. Were colonoscopies completed via an open access pathway or were the patients required to see a gastroenterologist first? How long was the average wait time for colonoscopy once scheduled? What were the local policies on requiring an escort after the procedure?”
He also noted that some aspects of the study — such as access to reduced-cost specialty care and free ride-share services — may limit generalizable to settings without such resources.
He added: “Although patient navigators for cancer treatment have mandated reimbursement, there is no current reimbursement for navigators for abnormal screening tests, another barrier to wide-spread implementation.”
Bhuta said that the dropout rate in the study mirrors that of his own real-world practice, which serves a high-risk, low-resource community. “I would specifically like to see research that provides behavioral insights on why patients respond positively to navigation — whether it is due to reminders, emotional support, or logistical assistance. Is it systemic barriers or patient disinterest or both that drives noncompliance?”
Despite these uncertainties and the need to refine implementation logistics, Bhuta concluded, “this strategy is a promising tool to reduce disparities and improve colorectal cancer outcomes. Clinicians should advocate for or implement structured follow-up systems, particularly in high-risk populations.”
The study was funded by the US National Cancer Institute. Coronado received a grant/contract from Guardant Health. Bhuta declared no relevant conflicts of interest.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
The intervention led to a significant 13-point increase in follow-up colonoscopy completion at 1 year, compared with usual care (55.1% vs 42.1%), according the study, which was published online in Annals of Internal Medicine.
“Patients with an abnormal fecal test results have about a 1 in 20 chance of having colorectal cancer found, and many more will be found to have advanced adenomas that can be removed to prevent cancer,” Gloria Coronado, PhD, of Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research, Portland, Oregon, and University of Arizona Cancer Center, Tucson, said in an interview.
“It is critical that these patients get a follow-up colonoscopy,” she said. “Patient navigation can accomplish this goal.”
‘Highly Effective’ Intervention
Researchers compared the effectiveness of a patient navigation program with that of usual care outreach in increasing follow-up colonoscopy completion after an abnormal stool test. They also developed a risk-prediction model that calculated a patient’s probability of obtaining a follow-up colonoscopy without navigation to determine if the addition of this intervention had a greater impact on those determined to be less likely to follow through.
The study included 967 patients from a community health center in Washington State who received an abnormal fecal test result within the prior month. The mean age of participants was 61 years, approximately 45% were women and 77% were White, and 18% preferred a Spanish-language intervention. In total, 479 patients received the intervention and 488 received usual care.
The intervention was delivered by a patient navigator who mailed introductory letters, sent text messages, and made live phone calls. In the calls, the navigators addressed the topics of barrier assessment and resolution, bowel preparation instruction and reminders, colonoscopy check-in, and understanding colonoscopy results and retesting intervals.
Patients in the usual-care group were contacted by a referral coordinator to schedule a follow-up colonoscopy appointment. If they couldn’t be reached initially, up to two follow-up attempts were made at 30 and 45 days after the referral date.
Patient navigation resulted in a significant 13% increase in follow-up, and those in this group completed a colonoscopy 27 days sooner than those in the usual care group (mean, 229 days vs 256 days).
Contrary to the authors’ expectation, the effectiveness of the intervention did not vary by patients’ predicted likelihood of obtaining a colonoscopy without navigation.
Notably, 20.3% of patients were unreachable or lost to follow-up, and 29.7% did not receive navigation. Among the 479 patients assigned to navigation, 79 (16.5%) declined participation and 56 (11.7%) were never reached.
The study was primarily conducted during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, which created additional systemic and individual barriers to completing colonoscopies.
Nevertheless, the authors wrote, “our findings suggest that patient navigation is highly effective for patients eligible for colonoscopy.”
“Most patients who were reached were contacted with six or fewer phone attempts,” Coronado noted. “Further efforts are needed to determine how to reach and motivate patients [who did not participate] to get a follow-up colonoscopy.”
Coronado and colleagues are exploring ways to leverage artificial intelligence and virtual approaches to augment patient navigation programs — for example, by using a virtual navigator or low-cost automated tools to provide education to build patient confidence in getting a colonoscopy.
‘A Promising Tool’
“Colonoscopy completion after positive stool-based testing is critical to mitigating the impact of colon cancer,” commented Rajiv Bhuta, MD, assistant professor of clinical gastroenterology & hepatology, Lewis Katz School of Medicine, Temple University, Philadelphia, who was not involved in the study. “While prior studies assessing navigation have demonstrated improvements, none were as large enrollment-wise or as generalizable as the current study.”
That said, Bhuta said in an interview that the study could have provided more detail about coordination and communication with local gastrointestinal practices.
“Local ordering and prescribing practices vary and can significantly impact compliance rates. Were colonoscopies completed via an open access pathway or were the patients required to see a gastroenterologist first? How long was the average wait time for colonoscopy once scheduled? What were the local policies on requiring an escort after the procedure?”
He also noted that some aspects of the study — such as access to reduced-cost specialty care and free ride-share services — may limit generalizable to settings without such resources.
He added: “Although patient navigators for cancer treatment have mandated reimbursement, there is no current reimbursement for navigators for abnormal screening tests, another barrier to wide-spread implementation.”
Bhuta said that the dropout rate in the study mirrors that of his own real-world practice, which serves a high-risk, low-resource community. “I would specifically like to see research that provides behavioral insights on why patients respond positively to navigation — whether it is due to reminders, emotional support, or logistical assistance. Is it systemic barriers or patient disinterest or both that drives noncompliance?”
Despite these uncertainties and the need to refine implementation logistics, Bhuta concluded, “this strategy is a promising tool to reduce disparities and improve colorectal cancer outcomes. Clinicians should advocate for or implement structured follow-up systems, particularly in high-risk populations.”
The study was funded by the US National Cancer Institute. Coronado received a grant/contract from Guardant Health. Bhuta declared no relevant conflicts of interest.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
The intervention led to a significant 13-point increase in follow-up colonoscopy completion at 1 year, compared with usual care (55.1% vs 42.1%), according the study, which was published online in Annals of Internal Medicine.
“Patients with an abnormal fecal test results have about a 1 in 20 chance of having colorectal cancer found, and many more will be found to have advanced adenomas that can be removed to prevent cancer,” Gloria Coronado, PhD, of Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research, Portland, Oregon, and University of Arizona Cancer Center, Tucson, said in an interview.
“It is critical that these patients get a follow-up colonoscopy,” she said. “Patient navigation can accomplish this goal.”
‘Highly Effective’ Intervention
Researchers compared the effectiveness of a patient navigation program with that of usual care outreach in increasing follow-up colonoscopy completion after an abnormal stool test. They also developed a risk-prediction model that calculated a patient’s probability of obtaining a follow-up colonoscopy without navigation to determine if the addition of this intervention had a greater impact on those determined to be less likely to follow through.
The study included 967 patients from a community health center in Washington State who received an abnormal fecal test result within the prior month. The mean age of participants was 61 years, approximately 45% were women and 77% were White, and 18% preferred a Spanish-language intervention. In total, 479 patients received the intervention and 488 received usual care.
The intervention was delivered by a patient navigator who mailed introductory letters, sent text messages, and made live phone calls. In the calls, the navigators addressed the topics of barrier assessment and resolution, bowel preparation instruction and reminders, colonoscopy check-in, and understanding colonoscopy results and retesting intervals.
Patients in the usual-care group were contacted by a referral coordinator to schedule a follow-up colonoscopy appointment. If they couldn’t be reached initially, up to two follow-up attempts were made at 30 and 45 days after the referral date.
Patient navigation resulted in a significant 13% increase in follow-up, and those in this group completed a colonoscopy 27 days sooner than those in the usual care group (mean, 229 days vs 256 days).
Contrary to the authors’ expectation, the effectiveness of the intervention did not vary by patients’ predicted likelihood of obtaining a colonoscopy without navigation.
Notably, 20.3% of patients were unreachable or lost to follow-up, and 29.7% did not receive navigation. Among the 479 patients assigned to navigation, 79 (16.5%) declined participation and 56 (11.7%) were never reached.
The study was primarily conducted during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, which created additional systemic and individual barriers to completing colonoscopies.
Nevertheless, the authors wrote, “our findings suggest that patient navigation is highly effective for patients eligible for colonoscopy.”
“Most patients who were reached were contacted with six or fewer phone attempts,” Coronado noted. “Further efforts are needed to determine how to reach and motivate patients [who did not participate] to get a follow-up colonoscopy.”
Coronado and colleagues are exploring ways to leverage artificial intelligence and virtual approaches to augment patient navigation programs — for example, by using a virtual navigator or low-cost automated tools to provide education to build patient confidence in getting a colonoscopy.
‘A Promising Tool’
“Colonoscopy completion after positive stool-based testing is critical to mitigating the impact of colon cancer,” commented Rajiv Bhuta, MD, assistant professor of clinical gastroenterology & hepatology, Lewis Katz School of Medicine, Temple University, Philadelphia, who was not involved in the study. “While prior studies assessing navigation have demonstrated improvements, none were as large enrollment-wise or as generalizable as the current study.”
That said, Bhuta said in an interview that the study could have provided more detail about coordination and communication with local gastrointestinal practices.
“Local ordering and prescribing practices vary and can significantly impact compliance rates. Were colonoscopies completed via an open access pathway or were the patients required to see a gastroenterologist first? How long was the average wait time for colonoscopy once scheduled? What were the local policies on requiring an escort after the procedure?”
He also noted that some aspects of the study — such as access to reduced-cost specialty care and free ride-share services — may limit generalizable to settings without such resources.
He added: “Although patient navigators for cancer treatment have mandated reimbursement, there is no current reimbursement for navigators for abnormal screening tests, another barrier to wide-spread implementation.”
Bhuta said that the dropout rate in the study mirrors that of his own real-world practice, which serves a high-risk, low-resource community. “I would specifically like to see research that provides behavioral insights on why patients respond positively to navigation — whether it is due to reminders, emotional support, or logistical assistance. Is it systemic barriers or patient disinterest or both that drives noncompliance?”
Despite these uncertainties and the need to refine implementation logistics, Bhuta concluded, “this strategy is a promising tool to reduce disparities and improve colorectal cancer outcomes. Clinicians should advocate for or implement structured follow-up systems, particularly in high-risk populations.”
The study was funded by the US National Cancer Institute. Coronado received a grant/contract from Guardant Health. Bhuta declared no relevant conflicts of interest.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE
Don’t Overlook Processed Meat as Colorectal Cancer Risk Factor
Even though older adults are more likely to be diagnosed with colorectal cancer (CRC),
Many are familiar with the modifiable risk factors of obesity, smoking, and alcohol consumption, but the impact of processed meat — a common element of the Western diet —often remains underappreciated.
But the data are clear: Processed meat, defined as meat that has been altered through methods such as salting, curing, fermentation, or smoking to enhance flavor or preservation, has been linked to an increased risk for CRC.
The International Agency for Research on Cancer, part of the World Health Organization, analyzed over 800 global studies and classified processed meats as carcinogenic to humans, whereas red meat was deemed “probably” carcinogenic. Their findings were later published in The Lancet Oncology, confirming that the strongest epidemiological evidence linked processed meat consumption to CRC.
“While I routinely counsel my patients about lifestyle and dietary risk factors for CRC, including processed meat, I’m not sure how often this is specifically mentioned by physicians in practice,” Peter S. Liang, MD, MPH, an assistant professor and researcher focused on CRC prevention at NYU Langone Health in New York City, and an AGA spokesperson, told GI & Hepatology News.
David A. Johnson, MD, chief of gastroenterology at Eastern Virginia Medical School and Old Dominion University, both in Norfolk, Virginia, concurred.
Many healthcare providers may not fully recognize the risks posed by processed meat in relation to CRC to counsel their patients, Johnson said. “In my experience, there is not a widespread awareness.”
Understanding the Carcinogenic Risks
The excess risk for CRC per gram of intake is higher for processed meat than for red meat. However, the threshold for harmful consumption varies among studies, and many group red and processed meat together in their analyses.
For example, a 2020 prospective analysis of UK Biobank data reported that a 70 g/d higher intake of red and processed meat was associated with a 32% and 40% greater risk for CRC and colon cancer, respectively.
More recently, a 2025 prospective study examined the associations between CRC and 97 dietary factors in 542,778 women. Investigators found that, aside from alcohol, red and processed meat were the only other dietary factors positively associated with CRC, with a 30 g/d intake increasing the risk for CRC by 8%.
Although the World Cancer Research Fund (WCRF) and the American Institute for Cancer Research (AICR) recommend limiting red meat consumption to no more than three portions a week, their guidance on processed meat is simpler and more restrictive: Consume very little, if any.
The risk for CRC associated with processed meats is likely due to a naturally occurring element in the meat and carcinogenic compounds that are added or created during its preparation, Johnson said.
Large bodies of evidence support the association between certain compounds in processed meat and cancer, added Ulrike Peters, PhD, MPH, professor and associate director of the Public Health Sciences Division at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle.
These compounds include:
- Heterocyclic amines: Prevalent in charred and well-done meat, these chemicals are created from the reaction at high temperatures between creatine/creatinine, amino acids, and sugars.
- Nitrates/nitrites: Widely used in the curing of meat (eg, sausages, ham, bacon) to give products their pink coloring and savory flavor, these inorganic compounds bind with amines to produce N-nitrosamines, among the most potent genotoxic carcinogens.
- Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons: Generated during high-temperature cooking and smoking, these compounds can induce DNA damage in the colon.
- Heme iron: This type of iron, abundant in red and processed meats, promotes formation of carcinogenic N-nitroso compounds and oxidative damage to intestinal tissue.
Peters said that the compounds may work synergistically to increase the risk for CRC through various mechanisms, including DNA damage, inflammation, and altered gut microbiota.
While it would be useful to study whether the different meat-processing methods — for example, smoking vs salting — affect CRC risk differently, “practically, this is difficult because there’s so much overlap,” Liang noted.
Risk Mitigation
Lifestyle factors likely play a crucial role in the risk for CRC. For example, a study of European migrants to Australia found that those from countries with lower CRC incidences tended to develop a higher risk for CRC the longer they resided in Australia due to the dietary change.
Understanding how to mitigate these risk factors is becoming increasingly important with the rates of early-onset CRC projected to double by 2030 in the United States, a trend that is also being observed globally.
“With early-onset CRC, it’s becoming quite clear that there’s no single risk factor that’s driving this increase,” Liang said. “We need to look at the risk factors that we know cause CRC in older adults and see which have become more common over time.”
The consumption of processed meats is one such factor that’s been implicated, particularly for early-onset CRC. The average global consumption of all types of meat per capita has increased significantly over the last 50 years. A 2022 report estimated that global mean processed meat consumption was 17 g/d, with significantly higher rates in high-income regions. This number is expected to rise, with the global processed meat market projected to grow from $318 billion in 2023 to $429 billion by 2029. Given this, the importance of counseling patients to reduce their meat intake is further underscored.
Another strategy for mitigating the risks around processed meat is specifically identifying those patients who may be most vulnerable.
In 2024, Peters and colleagues published findings from their genome-wide gene-environment interaction analysis comparing a large population with CRC and healthy control individuals. The research identified two novel biomarkers that support the role of red and processed meat with an increased risk for CRC and may explain the higher risk in certain population subgroups. They are working on genetic risk prediction models that will incorporate these genetic markers but must first ensure robust validation through larger studies.
“This approach aligns with precision medicine principles, allowing for more personalized prevention strategies, though we’re not quite there yet in terms of clinical application,” Peters said.
Another knowledge gap that future research efforts could address is how dietary factors influence survival outcomes after a diagnosis of CRC.
“The existing guidelines primarily focus on cancer prevention, with strong evidence linking processed meat consumption to increased CRC risk. However, the impact of dietary choices on survival after CRC diagnosis remains poorly understood,” Peters said. “This distinction between prevention and survival is crucial, as biological mechanisms and optimal dietary interventions may differ significantly between these two contexts.”
Well-designed studies investigating the relationship between dietary patterns and CRC survival outcomes would enable the development of evidence-based nutritional recommendations specifically tailored for CRC survivors, Peters said. In addition, she called for well-designed studies that compare levels of processed meat consumption between cohorts of patients with early-onset CRC and healthy counterparts.
“This would help establish whether there’s a true causal relationship rather than just correlation,” Peters said.
Simple Strategies to Dietary Changes
With a 2024 study finding that greater adherence to WCRF/AICR Cancer Prevention Recommendations, including reducing processed meat consumption, was linked to a 14% reduction in CRC risk, physicians should emphasize the benefits of adopting dietary and lifestyle recommendations to patients.
Johnson advised simple strategies to encourage any needed dietary changes.
“Pay attention to what you eat, proportions, and variation of meal menus. Those are good starter points,” he told GI & Hepatology News. “None of these recommendations related to meats should be absolute, but reduction can be the target.”
Liang stressed the importance of repeated, nonjudgmental discussions.
“Research shows that physician recommendation is one of the strongest motivators in preventive health, so even if it doesn’t work the first few times, we have to continue delivering the message that can improve our patients’ health.”
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Even though older adults are more likely to be diagnosed with colorectal cancer (CRC),
Many are familiar with the modifiable risk factors of obesity, smoking, and alcohol consumption, but the impact of processed meat — a common element of the Western diet —often remains underappreciated.
But the data are clear: Processed meat, defined as meat that has been altered through methods such as salting, curing, fermentation, or smoking to enhance flavor or preservation, has been linked to an increased risk for CRC.
The International Agency for Research on Cancer, part of the World Health Organization, analyzed over 800 global studies and classified processed meats as carcinogenic to humans, whereas red meat was deemed “probably” carcinogenic. Their findings were later published in The Lancet Oncology, confirming that the strongest epidemiological evidence linked processed meat consumption to CRC.
“While I routinely counsel my patients about lifestyle and dietary risk factors for CRC, including processed meat, I’m not sure how often this is specifically mentioned by physicians in practice,” Peter S. Liang, MD, MPH, an assistant professor and researcher focused on CRC prevention at NYU Langone Health in New York City, and an AGA spokesperson, told GI & Hepatology News.
David A. Johnson, MD, chief of gastroenterology at Eastern Virginia Medical School and Old Dominion University, both in Norfolk, Virginia, concurred.
Many healthcare providers may not fully recognize the risks posed by processed meat in relation to CRC to counsel their patients, Johnson said. “In my experience, there is not a widespread awareness.”
Understanding the Carcinogenic Risks
The excess risk for CRC per gram of intake is higher for processed meat than for red meat. However, the threshold for harmful consumption varies among studies, and many group red and processed meat together in their analyses.
For example, a 2020 prospective analysis of UK Biobank data reported that a 70 g/d higher intake of red and processed meat was associated with a 32% and 40% greater risk for CRC and colon cancer, respectively.
More recently, a 2025 prospective study examined the associations between CRC and 97 dietary factors in 542,778 women. Investigators found that, aside from alcohol, red and processed meat were the only other dietary factors positively associated with CRC, with a 30 g/d intake increasing the risk for CRC by 8%.
Although the World Cancer Research Fund (WCRF) and the American Institute for Cancer Research (AICR) recommend limiting red meat consumption to no more than three portions a week, their guidance on processed meat is simpler and more restrictive: Consume very little, if any.
The risk for CRC associated with processed meats is likely due to a naturally occurring element in the meat and carcinogenic compounds that are added or created during its preparation, Johnson said.
Large bodies of evidence support the association between certain compounds in processed meat and cancer, added Ulrike Peters, PhD, MPH, professor and associate director of the Public Health Sciences Division at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle.
These compounds include:
- Heterocyclic amines: Prevalent in charred and well-done meat, these chemicals are created from the reaction at high temperatures between creatine/creatinine, amino acids, and sugars.
- Nitrates/nitrites: Widely used in the curing of meat (eg, sausages, ham, bacon) to give products their pink coloring and savory flavor, these inorganic compounds bind with amines to produce N-nitrosamines, among the most potent genotoxic carcinogens.
- Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons: Generated during high-temperature cooking and smoking, these compounds can induce DNA damage in the colon.
- Heme iron: This type of iron, abundant in red and processed meats, promotes formation of carcinogenic N-nitroso compounds and oxidative damage to intestinal tissue.
Peters said that the compounds may work synergistically to increase the risk for CRC through various mechanisms, including DNA damage, inflammation, and altered gut microbiota.
While it would be useful to study whether the different meat-processing methods — for example, smoking vs salting — affect CRC risk differently, “practically, this is difficult because there’s so much overlap,” Liang noted.
Risk Mitigation
Lifestyle factors likely play a crucial role in the risk for CRC. For example, a study of European migrants to Australia found that those from countries with lower CRC incidences tended to develop a higher risk for CRC the longer they resided in Australia due to the dietary change.
Understanding how to mitigate these risk factors is becoming increasingly important with the rates of early-onset CRC projected to double by 2030 in the United States, a trend that is also being observed globally.
“With early-onset CRC, it’s becoming quite clear that there’s no single risk factor that’s driving this increase,” Liang said. “We need to look at the risk factors that we know cause CRC in older adults and see which have become more common over time.”
The consumption of processed meats is one such factor that’s been implicated, particularly for early-onset CRC. The average global consumption of all types of meat per capita has increased significantly over the last 50 years. A 2022 report estimated that global mean processed meat consumption was 17 g/d, with significantly higher rates in high-income regions. This number is expected to rise, with the global processed meat market projected to grow from $318 billion in 2023 to $429 billion by 2029. Given this, the importance of counseling patients to reduce their meat intake is further underscored.
Another strategy for mitigating the risks around processed meat is specifically identifying those patients who may be most vulnerable.
In 2024, Peters and colleagues published findings from their genome-wide gene-environment interaction analysis comparing a large population with CRC and healthy control individuals. The research identified two novel biomarkers that support the role of red and processed meat with an increased risk for CRC and may explain the higher risk in certain population subgroups. They are working on genetic risk prediction models that will incorporate these genetic markers but must first ensure robust validation through larger studies.
“This approach aligns with precision medicine principles, allowing for more personalized prevention strategies, though we’re not quite there yet in terms of clinical application,” Peters said.
Another knowledge gap that future research efforts could address is how dietary factors influence survival outcomes after a diagnosis of CRC.
“The existing guidelines primarily focus on cancer prevention, with strong evidence linking processed meat consumption to increased CRC risk. However, the impact of dietary choices on survival after CRC diagnosis remains poorly understood,” Peters said. “This distinction between prevention and survival is crucial, as biological mechanisms and optimal dietary interventions may differ significantly between these two contexts.”
Well-designed studies investigating the relationship between dietary patterns and CRC survival outcomes would enable the development of evidence-based nutritional recommendations specifically tailored for CRC survivors, Peters said. In addition, she called for well-designed studies that compare levels of processed meat consumption between cohorts of patients with early-onset CRC and healthy counterparts.
“This would help establish whether there’s a true causal relationship rather than just correlation,” Peters said.
Simple Strategies to Dietary Changes
With a 2024 study finding that greater adherence to WCRF/AICR Cancer Prevention Recommendations, including reducing processed meat consumption, was linked to a 14% reduction in CRC risk, physicians should emphasize the benefits of adopting dietary and lifestyle recommendations to patients.
Johnson advised simple strategies to encourage any needed dietary changes.
“Pay attention to what you eat, proportions, and variation of meal menus. Those are good starter points,” he told GI & Hepatology News. “None of these recommendations related to meats should be absolute, but reduction can be the target.”
Liang stressed the importance of repeated, nonjudgmental discussions.
“Research shows that physician recommendation is one of the strongest motivators in preventive health, so even if it doesn’t work the first few times, we have to continue delivering the message that can improve our patients’ health.”
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Even though older adults are more likely to be diagnosed with colorectal cancer (CRC),
Many are familiar with the modifiable risk factors of obesity, smoking, and alcohol consumption, but the impact of processed meat — a common element of the Western diet —often remains underappreciated.
But the data are clear: Processed meat, defined as meat that has been altered through methods such as salting, curing, fermentation, or smoking to enhance flavor or preservation, has been linked to an increased risk for CRC.
The International Agency for Research on Cancer, part of the World Health Organization, analyzed over 800 global studies and classified processed meats as carcinogenic to humans, whereas red meat was deemed “probably” carcinogenic. Their findings were later published in The Lancet Oncology, confirming that the strongest epidemiological evidence linked processed meat consumption to CRC.
“While I routinely counsel my patients about lifestyle and dietary risk factors for CRC, including processed meat, I’m not sure how often this is specifically mentioned by physicians in practice,” Peter S. Liang, MD, MPH, an assistant professor and researcher focused on CRC prevention at NYU Langone Health in New York City, and an AGA spokesperson, told GI & Hepatology News.
David A. Johnson, MD, chief of gastroenterology at Eastern Virginia Medical School and Old Dominion University, both in Norfolk, Virginia, concurred.
Many healthcare providers may not fully recognize the risks posed by processed meat in relation to CRC to counsel their patients, Johnson said. “In my experience, there is not a widespread awareness.”
Understanding the Carcinogenic Risks
The excess risk for CRC per gram of intake is higher for processed meat than for red meat. However, the threshold for harmful consumption varies among studies, and many group red and processed meat together in their analyses.
For example, a 2020 prospective analysis of UK Biobank data reported that a 70 g/d higher intake of red and processed meat was associated with a 32% and 40% greater risk for CRC and colon cancer, respectively.
More recently, a 2025 prospective study examined the associations between CRC and 97 dietary factors in 542,778 women. Investigators found that, aside from alcohol, red and processed meat were the only other dietary factors positively associated with CRC, with a 30 g/d intake increasing the risk for CRC by 8%.
Although the World Cancer Research Fund (WCRF) and the American Institute for Cancer Research (AICR) recommend limiting red meat consumption to no more than three portions a week, their guidance on processed meat is simpler and more restrictive: Consume very little, if any.
The risk for CRC associated with processed meats is likely due to a naturally occurring element in the meat and carcinogenic compounds that are added or created during its preparation, Johnson said.
Large bodies of evidence support the association between certain compounds in processed meat and cancer, added Ulrike Peters, PhD, MPH, professor and associate director of the Public Health Sciences Division at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle.
These compounds include:
- Heterocyclic amines: Prevalent in charred and well-done meat, these chemicals are created from the reaction at high temperatures between creatine/creatinine, amino acids, and sugars.
- Nitrates/nitrites: Widely used in the curing of meat (eg, sausages, ham, bacon) to give products their pink coloring and savory flavor, these inorganic compounds bind with amines to produce N-nitrosamines, among the most potent genotoxic carcinogens.
- Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons: Generated during high-temperature cooking and smoking, these compounds can induce DNA damage in the colon.
- Heme iron: This type of iron, abundant in red and processed meats, promotes formation of carcinogenic N-nitroso compounds and oxidative damage to intestinal tissue.
Peters said that the compounds may work synergistically to increase the risk for CRC through various mechanisms, including DNA damage, inflammation, and altered gut microbiota.
While it would be useful to study whether the different meat-processing methods — for example, smoking vs salting — affect CRC risk differently, “practically, this is difficult because there’s so much overlap,” Liang noted.
Risk Mitigation
Lifestyle factors likely play a crucial role in the risk for CRC. For example, a study of European migrants to Australia found that those from countries with lower CRC incidences tended to develop a higher risk for CRC the longer they resided in Australia due to the dietary change.
Understanding how to mitigate these risk factors is becoming increasingly important with the rates of early-onset CRC projected to double by 2030 in the United States, a trend that is also being observed globally.
“With early-onset CRC, it’s becoming quite clear that there’s no single risk factor that’s driving this increase,” Liang said. “We need to look at the risk factors that we know cause CRC in older adults and see which have become more common over time.”
The consumption of processed meats is one such factor that’s been implicated, particularly for early-onset CRC. The average global consumption of all types of meat per capita has increased significantly over the last 50 years. A 2022 report estimated that global mean processed meat consumption was 17 g/d, with significantly higher rates in high-income regions. This number is expected to rise, with the global processed meat market projected to grow from $318 billion in 2023 to $429 billion by 2029. Given this, the importance of counseling patients to reduce their meat intake is further underscored.
Another strategy for mitigating the risks around processed meat is specifically identifying those patients who may be most vulnerable.
In 2024, Peters and colleagues published findings from their genome-wide gene-environment interaction analysis comparing a large population with CRC and healthy control individuals. The research identified two novel biomarkers that support the role of red and processed meat with an increased risk for CRC and may explain the higher risk in certain population subgroups. They are working on genetic risk prediction models that will incorporate these genetic markers but must first ensure robust validation through larger studies.
“This approach aligns with precision medicine principles, allowing for more personalized prevention strategies, though we’re not quite there yet in terms of clinical application,” Peters said.
Another knowledge gap that future research efforts could address is how dietary factors influence survival outcomes after a diagnosis of CRC.
“The existing guidelines primarily focus on cancer prevention, with strong evidence linking processed meat consumption to increased CRC risk. However, the impact of dietary choices on survival after CRC diagnosis remains poorly understood,” Peters said. “This distinction between prevention and survival is crucial, as biological mechanisms and optimal dietary interventions may differ significantly between these two contexts.”
Well-designed studies investigating the relationship between dietary patterns and CRC survival outcomes would enable the development of evidence-based nutritional recommendations specifically tailored for CRC survivors, Peters said. In addition, she called for well-designed studies that compare levels of processed meat consumption between cohorts of patients with early-onset CRC and healthy counterparts.
“This would help establish whether there’s a true causal relationship rather than just correlation,” Peters said.
Simple Strategies to Dietary Changes
With a 2024 study finding that greater adherence to WCRF/AICR Cancer Prevention Recommendations, including reducing processed meat consumption, was linked to a 14% reduction in CRC risk, physicians should emphasize the benefits of adopting dietary and lifestyle recommendations to patients.
Johnson advised simple strategies to encourage any needed dietary changes.
“Pay attention to what you eat, proportions, and variation of meal menus. Those are good starter points,” he told GI & Hepatology News. “None of these recommendations related to meats should be absolute, but reduction can be the target.”
Liang stressed the importance of repeated, nonjudgmental discussions.
“Research shows that physician recommendation is one of the strongest motivators in preventive health, so even if it doesn’t work the first few times, we have to continue delivering the message that can improve our patients’ health.”
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Could Statins Prevent Hepatocellular Carcinoma?
, emerging research, including several large cohort studies, suggested.
The most recent study, published in JAMA Internal Medicine, showed a lower incidence of hepatic decompensation among statin users in a registry for adults aged 40 years or older with baseline chronic liver disease.
“Our findings support the idea that statins may offer benefits beyond lipid-lowering in patients with [chronic liver disease], and clinicians may be more confident in prescribing statins when indicated,” even in these patients, said corresponding Co-author Raymond T. Chung, MD, gastroenterology investigator at Mass General Research Institute, Boston, in an interview.
“While prior studies have suggested an association between statin use and reduced hepatocellular carcinoma risk, our study aimed to build on that evidence by using a large, real-world, hospital-based cohort inclusive of all etiologies of chronic liver disease,” Chung told GI & Hepatology News.
Chung, along with Jonggi Choi, MD, of the University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea, and colleagues, reviewed data from the Research Patient Data Registry from 2000 to 2023 for 16,501 participantsaged 40 years or older with baseline chronic liver disease and baseline Fibrosis-4 (FIB-4) scores ≥ 1.3.
The study population had a mean age of 59.7 years, and 40.9% were women. The researchers divided the population into statin users (n = 3610) and nonusers (n = 12,891). Statin use was defined as a cumulative defined daily dose ≥ 30 mg.
The primary outcome was the cumulative incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma and hepatic decompensation.
At 10 years follow-up, statin users showed a significantly reduced incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma vs nonusers (3.8% vs 8.0%; P < .001) as well as a significantly reduced incidence of hepatic decompensation (10.6% vs 19.5%; P < .001).
Incorporating FIB-4 scores, a surrogate marker for liver fibrosis, also showed that statin users were less likely to experience fibrosis progression, offering a potential mechanism of action for the observed reduction in adverse liver outcomes, Chung told GI & Hepatology News.
“Similar trends have been observed in prior observational studies, but our findings now support a real effect of statin use on fibrosis progression,” he said. “However, what strengthened our study was that the association remained consistent across multiple subgroups and sensitivity analyses.”
Another study published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology showed a reduced risk of developing severe liver disease in a Swedish cohort of noncirrhotic adults with chronic liver disease who used statins (n = 3862) compared with control patients with chronic liver disease (matched 1:1) and who did not use statins (hazard ratio [HR], 0.60).
In that study, Rajani Sharma, MD, and colleagues found a protective association in both prefibrosis and fibrosis stages at diagnosis, and statin use was associated with reduced rates of progression to both cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HR, 0.62 and 0.44, respectively).
Exciting and Necessary Research
The research by Choi and colleagues is “exciting,” said Bubu Banini, MD, PhD, an assistant professor in digestive diseases at Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, in an interview.
Liver cancer prevalence has risen over the past few decades in the United States and worldwide, and the 5-year overall survival rate of liver cancer is less than 20%, Banini told GI & Hepatology News.
Clinicians often withhold statins out of fear of liver injury in persons with chronic liver disease; however, a takeaway from this study is that for persons with chronic liver disease who have indications for statin use, the medication should not be withheld, she said.
Of course, prospective studies are needed to replicate the results, Banini added.
The study findings were limited by several factors, including the inability to adjust for all potential confounding variables, lack of data on post-index treatments, and the use of wide, cumulative, defined daily dose categories to ensure statistical power, the researchers noted.
“Moving forward, randomized controlled trials are essential to establish a causal relationship and clarify the molecular and clinical pathways through which statins exert hepatoprotective effects,” Chung added.
Randomized controlled trials are also needed to determine whether statins can actually reduce the risk for hepatocellular carcinoma and hepatic decompensation in patients with chronic liver disease, and cost-effectiveness analyses may be essential for translating this evidence into clinical guidelines, he added.
Statins and HCC Risk in the General Population
A large cohort study, published in JAMA Network Open by Mara Sophie Vell, PhD, and colleagues, showed an association between reduced risk for hepatocellular carcinoma and statin use in the general population and in those at increased risk for liver disease.
The study, which included data for individuals aged 37-73 years from the UK Biobank, found a 15% reduced risk for new-onset liver disease and a 28% reduced risk for liver-related death among regular statin users than among nonusers (HR, 0.85 and 0.72, respectively).
In addition, regular statin users showed a 74% reduced risk (P = .003) of developing hepatocellular carcinoma compared with those not using statins. The researchers identified a particular impact on liver disease risk reduction among men, individuals with diabetes, and patients with high levels of liver scarring at baseline based on the FIB-4 index.
A meta-analysis of 24 studies, previously published in the journal Cancers, showed a significant reduction of 46% in hepatocellular carcinoma risk among statins users compared with nonusers.
The researchers found this risk reduction was significant in subgroups of patients with diabetes, liver cirrhosis, and those on antiviral therapy, and they suggested that the antiangiogenic, immunomodulatory, antiproliferative, and antifibrotic properties of statins may contribute to their potential to reduce tumor growth or hepatocellular carcinoma development.
The meta-analysis authors noted that although most studies have reported a low risk for statin-induced hepatotoxicity, clinicians should proceed with caution in some patients with existing cirrhosis.
“If the patients are diagnosed with decompensated cirrhosis, then statins should be prescribed with caution at low doses,” they wrote.
Advocating statin use solely for chemoprevention may be premature based on observational data, Chung told GI & Hepatology News.
“However, in patients with [chronic liver disease] who already meet indications for statin therapy, the potential added benefit of reducing liver-related complications strengthens the rationale for their use,” he said. Future randomized clinical trials will be key to defining the risk-benefit profile in this context.
The study by Choi and colleagues was supported by the National Institutes of Health.
The study by Sharma and colleagues was supported by the Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden, and the Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York City; researchers were supported by grants from the Swedish Research Council, Center for Innovative Medicine, the Swedish Cancer Society, and the National Institutes of Health.
The study by Vell and colleagues had no outside funding.
The study by Mohaimenul Islam and colleagues was supported by the Ministry of Education and Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan.
Chung and Banini had no financial conflicts to disclose.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
, emerging research, including several large cohort studies, suggested.
The most recent study, published in JAMA Internal Medicine, showed a lower incidence of hepatic decompensation among statin users in a registry for adults aged 40 years or older with baseline chronic liver disease.
“Our findings support the idea that statins may offer benefits beyond lipid-lowering in patients with [chronic liver disease], and clinicians may be more confident in prescribing statins when indicated,” even in these patients, said corresponding Co-author Raymond T. Chung, MD, gastroenterology investigator at Mass General Research Institute, Boston, in an interview.
“While prior studies have suggested an association between statin use and reduced hepatocellular carcinoma risk, our study aimed to build on that evidence by using a large, real-world, hospital-based cohort inclusive of all etiologies of chronic liver disease,” Chung told GI & Hepatology News.
Chung, along with Jonggi Choi, MD, of the University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea, and colleagues, reviewed data from the Research Patient Data Registry from 2000 to 2023 for 16,501 participantsaged 40 years or older with baseline chronic liver disease and baseline Fibrosis-4 (FIB-4) scores ≥ 1.3.
The study population had a mean age of 59.7 years, and 40.9% were women. The researchers divided the population into statin users (n = 3610) and nonusers (n = 12,891). Statin use was defined as a cumulative defined daily dose ≥ 30 mg.
The primary outcome was the cumulative incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma and hepatic decompensation.
At 10 years follow-up, statin users showed a significantly reduced incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma vs nonusers (3.8% vs 8.0%; P < .001) as well as a significantly reduced incidence of hepatic decompensation (10.6% vs 19.5%; P < .001).
Incorporating FIB-4 scores, a surrogate marker for liver fibrosis, also showed that statin users were less likely to experience fibrosis progression, offering a potential mechanism of action for the observed reduction in adverse liver outcomes, Chung told GI & Hepatology News.
“Similar trends have been observed in prior observational studies, but our findings now support a real effect of statin use on fibrosis progression,” he said. “However, what strengthened our study was that the association remained consistent across multiple subgroups and sensitivity analyses.”
Another study published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology showed a reduced risk of developing severe liver disease in a Swedish cohort of noncirrhotic adults with chronic liver disease who used statins (n = 3862) compared with control patients with chronic liver disease (matched 1:1) and who did not use statins (hazard ratio [HR], 0.60).
In that study, Rajani Sharma, MD, and colleagues found a protective association in both prefibrosis and fibrosis stages at diagnosis, and statin use was associated with reduced rates of progression to both cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HR, 0.62 and 0.44, respectively).
Exciting and Necessary Research
The research by Choi and colleagues is “exciting,” said Bubu Banini, MD, PhD, an assistant professor in digestive diseases at Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, in an interview.
Liver cancer prevalence has risen over the past few decades in the United States and worldwide, and the 5-year overall survival rate of liver cancer is less than 20%, Banini told GI & Hepatology News.
Clinicians often withhold statins out of fear of liver injury in persons with chronic liver disease; however, a takeaway from this study is that for persons with chronic liver disease who have indications for statin use, the medication should not be withheld, she said.
Of course, prospective studies are needed to replicate the results, Banini added.
The study findings were limited by several factors, including the inability to adjust for all potential confounding variables, lack of data on post-index treatments, and the use of wide, cumulative, defined daily dose categories to ensure statistical power, the researchers noted.
“Moving forward, randomized controlled trials are essential to establish a causal relationship and clarify the molecular and clinical pathways through which statins exert hepatoprotective effects,” Chung added.
Randomized controlled trials are also needed to determine whether statins can actually reduce the risk for hepatocellular carcinoma and hepatic decompensation in patients with chronic liver disease, and cost-effectiveness analyses may be essential for translating this evidence into clinical guidelines, he added.
Statins and HCC Risk in the General Population
A large cohort study, published in JAMA Network Open by Mara Sophie Vell, PhD, and colleagues, showed an association between reduced risk for hepatocellular carcinoma and statin use in the general population and in those at increased risk for liver disease.
The study, which included data for individuals aged 37-73 years from the UK Biobank, found a 15% reduced risk for new-onset liver disease and a 28% reduced risk for liver-related death among regular statin users than among nonusers (HR, 0.85 and 0.72, respectively).
In addition, regular statin users showed a 74% reduced risk (P = .003) of developing hepatocellular carcinoma compared with those not using statins. The researchers identified a particular impact on liver disease risk reduction among men, individuals with diabetes, and patients with high levels of liver scarring at baseline based on the FIB-4 index.
A meta-analysis of 24 studies, previously published in the journal Cancers, showed a significant reduction of 46% in hepatocellular carcinoma risk among statins users compared with nonusers.
The researchers found this risk reduction was significant in subgroups of patients with diabetes, liver cirrhosis, and those on antiviral therapy, and they suggested that the antiangiogenic, immunomodulatory, antiproliferative, and antifibrotic properties of statins may contribute to their potential to reduce tumor growth or hepatocellular carcinoma development.
The meta-analysis authors noted that although most studies have reported a low risk for statin-induced hepatotoxicity, clinicians should proceed with caution in some patients with existing cirrhosis.
“If the patients are diagnosed with decompensated cirrhosis, then statins should be prescribed with caution at low doses,” they wrote.
Advocating statin use solely for chemoprevention may be premature based on observational data, Chung told GI & Hepatology News.
“However, in patients with [chronic liver disease] who already meet indications for statin therapy, the potential added benefit of reducing liver-related complications strengthens the rationale for their use,” he said. Future randomized clinical trials will be key to defining the risk-benefit profile in this context.
The study by Choi and colleagues was supported by the National Institutes of Health.
The study by Sharma and colleagues was supported by the Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden, and the Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York City; researchers were supported by grants from the Swedish Research Council, Center for Innovative Medicine, the Swedish Cancer Society, and the National Institutes of Health.
The study by Vell and colleagues had no outside funding.
The study by Mohaimenul Islam and colleagues was supported by the Ministry of Education and Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan.
Chung and Banini had no financial conflicts to disclose.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
, emerging research, including several large cohort studies, suggested.
The most recent study, published in JAMA Internal Medicine, showed a lower incidence of hepatic decompensation among statin users in a registry for adults aged 40 years or older with baseline chronic liver disease.
“Our findings support the idea that statins may offer benefits beyond lipid-lowering in patients with [chronic liver disease], and clinicians may be more confident in prescribing statins when indicated,” even in these patients, said corresponding Co-author Raymond T. Chung, MD, gastroenterology investigator at Mass General Research Institute, Boston, in an interview.
“While prior studies have suggested an association between statin use and reduced hepatocellular carcinoma risk, our study aimed to build on that evidence by using a large, real-world, hospital-based cohort inclusive of all etiologies of chronic liver disease,” Chung told GI & Hepatology News.
Chung, along with Jonggi Choi, MD, of the University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea, and colleagues, reviewed data from the Research Patient Data Registry from 2000 to 2023 for 16,501 participantsaged 40 years or older with baseline chronic liver disease and baseline Fibrosis-4 (FIB-4) scores ≥ 1.3.
The study population had a mean age of 59.7 years, and 40.9% were women. The researchers divided the population into statin users (n = 3610) and nonusers (n = 12,891). Statin use was defined as a cumulative defined daily dose ≥ 30 mg.
The primary outcome was the cumulative incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma and hepatic decompensation.
At 10 years follow-up, statin users showed a significantly reduced incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma vs nonusers (3.8% vs 8.0%; P < .001) as well as a significantly reduced incidence of hepatic decompensation (10.6% vs 19.5%; P < .001).
Incorporating FIB-4 scores, a surrogate marker for liver fibrosis, also showed that statin users were less likely to experience fibrosis progression, offering a potential mechanism of action for the observed reduction in adverse liver outcomes, Chung told GI & Hepatology News.
“Similar trends have been observed in prior observational studies, but our findings now support a real effect of statin use on fibrosis progression,” he said. “However, what strengthened our study was that the association remained consistent across multiple subgroups and sensitivity analyses.”
Another study published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology showed a reduced risk of developing severe liver disease in a Swedish cohort of noncirrhotic adults with chronic liver disease who used statins (n = 3862) compared with control patients with chronic liver disease (matched 1:1) and who did not use statins (hazard ratio [HR], 0.60).
In that study, Rajani Sharma, MD, and colleagues found a protective association in both prefibrosis and fibrosis stages at diagnosis, and statin use was associated with reduced rates of progression to both cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HR, 0.62 and 0.44, respectively).
Exciting and Necessary Research
The research by Choi and colleagues is “exciting,” said Bubu Banini, MD, PhD, an assistant professor in digestive diseases at Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, in an interview.
Liver cancer prevalence has risen over the past few decades in the United States and worldwide, and the 5-year overall survival rate of liver cancer is less than 20%, Banini told GI & Hepatology News.
Clinicians often withhold statins out of fear of liver injury in persons with chronic liver disease; however, a takeaway from this study is that for persons with chronic liver disease who have indications for statin use, the medication should not be withheld, she said.
Of course, prospective studies are needed to replicate the results, Banini added.
The study findings were limited by several factors, including the inability to adjust for all potential confounding variables, lack of data on post-index treatments, and the use of wide, cumulative, defined daily dose categories to ensure statistical power, the researchers noted.
“Moving forward, randomized controlled trials are essential to establish a causal relationship and clarify the molecular and clinical pathways through which statins exert hepatoprotective effects,” Chung added.
Randomized controlled trials are also needed to determine whether statins can actually reduce the risk for hepatocellular carcinoma and hepatic decompensation in patients with chronic liver disease, and cost-effectiveness analyses may be essential for translating this evidence into clinical guidelines, he added.
Statins and HCC Risk in the General Population
A large cohort study, published in JAMA Network Open by Mara Sophie Vell, PhD, and colleagues, showed an association between reduced risk for hepatocellular carcinoma and statin use in the general population and in those at increased risk for liver disease.
The study, which included data for individuals aged 37-73 years from the UK Biobank, found a 15% reduced risk for new-onset liver disease and a 28% reduced risk for liver-related death among regular statin users than among nonusers (HR, 0.85 and 0.72, respectively).
In addition, regular statin users showed a 74% reduced risk (P = .003) of developing hepatocellular carcinoma compared with those not using statins. The researchers identified a particular impact on liver disease risk reduction among men, individuals with diabetes, and patients with high levels of liver scarring at baseline based on the FIB-4 index.
A meta-analysis of 24 studies, previously published in the journal Cancers, showed a significant reduction of 46% in hepatocellular carcinoma risk among statins users compared with nonusers.
The researchers found this risk reduction was significant in subgroups of patients with diabetes, liver cirrhosis, and those on antiviral therapy, and they suggested that the antiangiogenic, immunomodulatory, antiproliferative, and antifibrotic properties of statins may contribute to their potential to reduce tumor growth or hepatocellular carcinoma development.
The meta-analysis authors noted that although most studies have reported a low risk for statin-induced hepatotoxicity, clinicians should proceed with caution in some patients with existing cirrhosis.
“If the patients are diagnosed with decompensated cirrhosis, then statins should be prescribed with caution at low doses,” they wrote.
Advocating statin use solely for chemoprevention may be premature based on observational data, Chung told GI & Hepatology News.
“However, in patients with [chronic liver disease] who already meet indications for statin therapy, the potential added benefit of reducing liver-related complications strengthens the rationale for their use,” he said. Future randomized clinical trials will be key to defining the risk-benefit profile in this context.
The study by Choi and colleagues was supported by the National Institutes of Health.
The study by Sharma and colleagues was supported by the Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden, and the Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York City; researchers were supported by grants from the Swedish Research Council, Center for Innovative Medicine, the Swedish Cancer Society, and the National Institutes of Health.
The study by Vell and colleagues had no outside funding.
The study by Mohaimenul Islam and colleagues was supported by the Ministry of Education and Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan.
Chung and Banini had no financial conflicts to disclose.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Simple Score Predicts Advanced Colorectal Neoplasia in Young Adults
While colorectal cancer (CRC) incidence has declined overall due to screening, early-onset CRC is on the rise, particularly in individuals younger than 45 years — an age group not currently recommended for CRC screening.
Studies have shown that the risk for early-onset advanced neoplasia varies based on several factors, including sex, race, family history of CRC, smoking, alcohol consumption, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, obesity, and diet.
A score that incorporates some of these factors to identify which younger adults are at higher risk for advanced neoplasia, a precursor to CRC, could support earlier, more targeted screening interventions.
The simple clinical score can be easily calculated by primary care providers in the office, Carole Macaron, MD, lead author of the study and a gastroenterologist at Cleveland Clinic, told GI & Hepatology News. “Patients with a high-risk score would be referred for colorectal cancer screening.”
The study was published in Digestive Diseases and Sciences.
To develop and validate their risk score, Macaron and colleagues did a retrospective cross-sectional analysis of 9446 individuals aged 18-44 years (mean age, 36.8 years; 61% women) who underwent colonoscopy at their center.
Advanced neoplasia was defined as a tubular adenoma ≥ 10 mm or any adenoma with villous features or high-grade dysplasia, sessile serrated polyp ≥ 10 mm, sessile serrated polyp with dysplasia, traditional serrated adenoma, or invasive adenocarcinoma.
The 346 (3.7%) individuals found to have advanced neoplasia served as the case group, and the remainder with normal colonoscopy or non-advanced neoplasia served as controls.
A multivariate logistic regression model identified three independent risk factors significantly associated with advanced neoplasia: Higher body mass index (BMI; P = .0157), former and current tobacco use (P = .0009 and P = .0015, respectively), and having a first-degree relative with CRC < 60 years (P < .0001) or other family history of CRC (P = .0117).
The researchers used these risk factors to develop a risk prediction score to estimate the likelihood of detecting advanced neoplasia, which ranged from a risk of 1.8% for patients with a score of 1 to 22.2% for those with a score of 12. Individuals with a score of ≥ 9 had a 14% or higher risk for advanced neoplasia.
Based on the risk model, the likelihood of detecting advanced neoplasia in an asymptomatic 32-year-old overweight individual, with a history of previous tobacco use and a first-degree relative younger than age 60 with CRC would be 20.3%, Macaron and colleagues noted.
The model demonstrated “moderate” discriminatory power in the validation set (C-statistic: 0.645), indicating that it can effectively differentiate between individuals at a higher and lower risk for advanced neoplasia.
Additionally, the authors are exploring ways to improve the discriminatory power of the score, possibly by including additional risk factors.
Given the score is calculated using easily obtainable risk factors for individuals younger than 45 who are at risk for early-onset colorectal neoplasia, it could help guide individualized screening decisions for those in whom screening is not currently offered, Macaron said. It could also serve as a tool for risk communication and shared decision-making.
Integration into electronic health records or online calculators may enhance its accessibility and clinical utility.
The authors noted that this retrospective study was conducted at a single center caring mainly for White non-Hispanic adults, limiting generalizability to the general population and to other races and ethnicities.
Validation in Real-World Setting Needed
“There are no currently accepted advanced colorectal neoplasia risk scores that are used in general practice,” said Steven H. Itzkowitz, MD, AGAF, professor of medicine, oncological sciences, and medical education, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City. “If these lesions can be predicted, it would enable these young individuals to undergo screening colonoscopy, which could detect and remove these lesions, thereby preventing CRC.”
Many of the known risk factors (family history, high BMI, or smoking) for CRC development at any age are incorporated within this tool, so it should be feasible to collect these data,” said Itzkowitz, who was not involved with the study.
But he cautioned that accurate and adequate family histories are not always performed. Clinicians also may not have considered combining these factors into an actionable risk score.
“If this score can be externally validated in a real-world setting, it could be a useful addition in our efforts to lower CRC rates among young individuals,” Itzkowitz said.
The study did not receive any funding. Macaron and Itzkowitz reported no competing interests.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
While colorectal cancer (CRC) incidence has declined overall due to screening, early-onset CRC is on the rise, particularly in individuals younger than 45 years — an age group not currently recommended for CRC screening.
Studies have shown that the risk for early-onset advanced neoplasia varies based on several factors, including sex, race, family history of CRC, smoking, alcohol consumption, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, obesity, and diet.
A score that incorporates some of these factors to identify which younger adults are at higher risk for advanced neoplasia, a precursor to CRC, could support earlier, more targeted screening interventions.
The simple clinical score can be easily calculated by primary care providers in the office, Carole Macaron, MD, lead author of the study and a gastroenterologist at Cleveland Clinic, told GI & Hepatology News. “Patients with a high-risk score would be referred for colorectal cancer screening.”
The study was published in Digestive Diseases and Sciences.
To develop and validate their risk score, Macaron and colleagues did a retrospective cross-sectional analysis of 9446 individuals aged 18-44 years (mean age, 36.8 years; 61% women) who underwent colonoscopy at their center.
Advanced neoplasia was defined as a tubular adenoma ≥ 10 mm or any adenoma with villous features or high-grade dysplasia, sessile serrated polyp ≥ 10 mm, sessile serrated polyp with dysplasia, traditional serrated adenoma, or invasive adenocarcinoma.
The 346 (3.7%) individuals found to have advanced neoplasia served as the case group, and the remainder with normal colonoscopy or non-advanced neoplasia served as controls.
A multivariate logistic regression model identified three independent risk factors significantly associated with advanced neoplasia: Higher body mass index (BMI; P = .0157), former and current tobacco use (P = .0009 and P = .0015, respectively), and having a first-degree relative with CRC < 60 years (P < .0001) or other family history of CRC (P = .0117).
The researchers used these risk factors to develop a risk prediction score to estimate the likelihood of detecting advanced neoplasia, which ranged from a risk of 1.8% for patients with a score of 1 to 22.2% for those with a score of 12. Individuals with a score of ≥ 9 had a 14% or higher risk for advanced neoplasia.
Based on the risk model, the likelihood of detecting advanced neoplasia in an asymptomatic 32-year-old overweight individual, with a history of previous tobacco use and a first-degree relative younger than age 60 with CRC would be 20.3%, Macaron and colleagues noted.
The model demonstrated “moderate” discriminatory power in the validation set (C-statistic: 0.645), indicating that it can effectively differentiate between individuals at a higher and lower risk for advanced neoplasia.
Additionally, the authors are exploring ways to improve the discriminatory power of the score, possibly by including additional risk factors.
Given the score is calculated using easily obtainable risk factors for individuals younger than 45 who are at risk for early-onset colorectal neoplasia, it could help guide individualized screening decisions for those in whom screening is not currently offered, Macaron said. It could also serve as a tool for risk communication and shared decision-making.
Integration into electronic health records or online calculators may enhance its accessibility and clinical utility.
The authors noted that this retrospective study was conducted at a single center caring mainly for White non-Hispanic adults, limiting generalizability to the general population and to other races and ethnicities.
Validation in Real-World Setting Needed
“There are no currently accepted advanced colorectal neoplasia risk scores that are used in general practice,” said Steven H. Itzkowitz, MD, AGAF, professor of medicine, oncological sciences, and medical education, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City. “If these lesions can be predicted, it would enable these young individuals to undergo screening colonoscopy, which could detect and remove these lesions, thereby preventing CRC.”
Many of the known risk factors (family history, high BMI, or smoking) for CRC development at any age are incorporated within this tool, so it should be feasible to collect these data,” said Itzkowitz, who was not involved with the study.
But he cautioned that accurate and adequate family histories are not always performed. Clinicians also may not have considered combining these factors into an actionable risk score.
“If this score can be externally validated in a real-world setting, it could be a useful addition in our efforts to lower CRC rates among young individuals,” Itzkowitz said.
The study did not receive any funding. Macaron and Itzkowitz reported no competing interests.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
While colorectal cancer (CRC) incidence has declined overall due to screening, early-onset CRC is on the rise, particularly in individuals younger than 45 years — an age group not currently recommended for CRC screening.
Studies have shown that the risk for early-onset advanced neoplasia varies based on several factors, including sex, race, family history of CRC, smoking, alcohol consumption, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, obesity, and diet.
A score that incorporates some of these factors to identify which younger adults are at higher risk for advanced neoplasia, a precursor to CRC, could support earlier, more targeted screening interventions.
The simple clinical score can be easily calculated by primary care providers in the office, Carole Macaron, MD, lead author of the study and a gastroenterologist at Cleveland Clinic, told GI & Hepatology News. “Patients with a high-risk score would be referred for colorectal cancer screening.”
The study was published in Digestive Diseases and Sciences.
To develop and validate their risk score, Macaron and colleagues did a retrospective cross-sectional analysis of 9446 individuals aged 18-44 years (mean age, 36.8 years; 61% women) who underwent colonoscopy at their center.
Advanced neoplasia was defined as a tubular adenoma ≥ 10 mm or any adenoma with villous features or high-grade dysplasia, sessile serrated polyp ≥ 10 mm, sessile serrated polyp with dysplasia, traditional serrated adenoma, or invasive adenocarcinoma.
The 346 (3.7%) individuals found to have advanced neoplasia served as the case group, and the remainder with normal colonoscopy or non-advanced neoplasia served as controls.
A multivariate logistic regression model identified three independent risk factors significantly associated with advanced neoplasia: Higher body mass index (BMI; P = .0157), former and current tobacco use (P = .0009 and P = .0015, respectively), and having a first-degree relative with CRC < 60 years (P < .0001) or other family history of CRC (P = .0117).
The researchers used these risk factors to develop a risk prediction score to estimate the likelihood of detecting advanced neoplasia, which ranged from a risk of 1.8% for patients with a score of 1 to 22.2% for those with a score of 12. Individuals with a score of ≥ 9 had a 14% or higher risk for advanced neoplasia.
Based on the risk model, the likelihood of detecting advanced neoplasia in an asymptomatic 32-year-old overweight individual, with a history of previous tobacco use and a first-degree relative younger than age 60 with CRC would be 20.3%, Macaron and colleagues noted.
The model demonstrated “moderate” discriminatory power in the validation set (C-statistic: 0.645), indicating that it can effectively differentiate between individuals at a higher and lower risk for advanced neoplasia.
Additionally, the authors are exploring ways to improve the discriminatory power of the score, possibly by including additional risk factors.
Given the score is calculated using easily obtainable risk factors for individuals younger than 45 who are at risk for early-onset colorectal neoplasia, it could help guide individualized screening decisions for those in whom screening is not currently offered, Macaron said. It could also serve as a tool for risk communication and shared decision-making.
Integration into electronic health records or online calculators may enhance its accessibility and clinical utility.
The authors noted that this retrospective study was conducted at a single center caring mainly for White non-Hispanic adults, limiting generalizability to the general population and to other races and ethnicities.
Validation in Real-World Setting Needed
“There are no currently accepted advanced colorectal neoplasia risk scores that are used in general practice,” said Steven H. Itzkowitz, MD, AGAF, professor of medicine, oncological sciences, and medical education, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City. “If these lesions can be predicted, it would enable these young individuals to undergo screening colonoscopy, which could detect and remove these lesions, thereby preventing CRC.”
Many of the known risk factors (family history, high BMI, or smoking) for CRC development at any age are incorporated within this tool, so it should be feasible to collect these data,” said Itzkowitz, who was not involved with the study.
But he cautioned that accurate and adequate family histories are not always performed. Clinicians also may not have considered combining these factors into an actionable risk score.
“If this score can be externally validated in a real-world setting, it could be a useful addition in our efforts to lower CRC rates among young individuals,” Itzkowitz said.
The study did not receive any funding. Macaron and Itzkowitz reported no competing interests.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
WATS-3D Biopsy Increases Detection of Barrett’s Esophagus in GERD
, new research showed.
Compared with forceps biopsies (FB) alone, the addition of WATS-3D led to confirmation of BE in an additional one fifth of patients, roughly doubled dysplasia diagnoses, and influenced clinical management in the majority of patients.
“The big take-home point here is that the use of WATS-3D brushing along with conventional biopsies increases the likelihood that intestinal metaplasia will be identified,” first author Nicholas Shaheen, MD, MPH, AGAF, with the Center for Esophageal Diseases and Swallowing, University of North Carolina School of Medicine at Chapel Hill, North Carolina, told GI & Hepatology News.
“Almost 20% of patients who harbor BE were only identified by WATS-3D and might have otherwise gone undiagnosed had only forceps biopsies been performed,” Shaheen said.
The study was published in The American Journal of Gastroenterology.
Beyond Traditional Biopsies
BE develops as a complication of chronic GERD and is the chief precursor to esophageal adenocarcinoma. Early detection of BE and dysplasia is crucial to enable timely intervention.
The current gold standard for BE screening involves upper endoscopy with FB following the Seattle protocol, which consists of four-quadrant biopsies from every 1-2 cm of areas of columnar-lined epithelium (CLE) to confirm the presence of intestinal metaplasia. However, this protocol is prone to sampling errors and high false-negative rates, leading to repeat endoscopy, the study team pointed out.
WATS-3D (CDx Diagnostics) is a complementary technique designed to improve diagnostic yield by using brush biopsy to sample more tissue than routine biopsies.
WATS-3D has been shown to increase detection of dysplasia in patients with BE undergoing surveillance for BE, but less is known about the value of WATS-3D for BE screening in a community-based cohort of patients with GERD.
To investigate, Shaheen and colleagues studied 23,933 consecutive patients enrolled in a prospective observational registry assessing the utility of WATS-3D in the screening of symptomatic GERD patients for BE.
Patients had both WATS-3D and FB in the same endoscopic session. No patient had a history of BE, intestinal metaplasia or dysplasia in esophageal mucosa, or esophageal surgery, endoscopic ablation or endoscopic mucosal resection prior to enrollment.
Overall, 6829 patients (29%) met endoscopic criteria for BE (≥ 1 cm esophageal CLE with accompanying biopsies showing intestinal metaplasia).
Of these, 2878 (42%) had intestinal metaplasia identified by either FB or WATS-3D, but 19.3% had their BE diagnosis confirmed solely on the basis of WATS-3D findings.
Among patients who fulfilled the endoscopic criteria for BE, the adjunctive yield of WATS-3D was 76.5% and the absolute yield was 18.1%.
Of the 240 (1.0%) patients with dysplasia, 107 (45%) were found solely by WATS-3D.
‘Clinically Valuable Adjunct’
Among patients with positive WATS-3D but negative FB results, clinical management changed in 90.7% of cases, mostly involving initiation or modification of surveillance and proton pump inhibitor therapy.
These results suggest that WATS-3D is a “clinically valuable adjunct” to FB for the diagnosis of BE when used as a screening tool in symptomatic GERD patients and particularly in patients with endoscopic evidence of > 1 cm esophageal columnar-lined epithelium, the study team wrote.
Adjunctive use of WATS-3D when BE is suspected “may save endoscopies and lead to quicker, more accurate diagnoses,” they added.
The investigators said a limitation of the study is the lack of central pathology review, potentially leading to diagnostic variability. They also noted that over half of the detected dysplasia cases were crypt dysplasia or indefinite for dysplasia, raising concerns about clinical significance.
Reached for comment, Philip O. Katz, MD, AGAF, professor of medicine and director of the GI Function Laboratories, Weill Cornell Medicine in New York, said he’s been using WATS for more than a decade as an adjunct to standard biopsy in patients undergoing screening and surveillance for BE and finds it clinically helpful in managing his patients.
This new study provides “further information that WATS added to biopsy that has been traditionally done with the Seattle protocol increases the yield of intestinal metaplasia and likely dysplasia in patients being screened for Barrett’s,” Katz, who wasn’t involved in the study, told GI & Hepatology News.
Funding for the study was provided by CDx Diagnostics. Shaheen and several coauthors disclosed relationships with the company. Katz disclosed relationships (consultant/advisor) for Phathom Pharmaceuticals and Sebella.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
, new research showed.
Compared with forceps biopsies (FB) alone, the addition of WATS-3D led to confirmation of BE in an additional one fifth of patients, roughly doubled dysplasia diagnoses, and influenced clinical management in the majority of patients.
“The big take-home point here is that the use of WATS-3D brushing along with conventional biopsies increases the likelihood that intestinal metaplasia will be identified,” first author Nicholas Shaheen, MD, MPH, AGAF, with the Center for Esophageal Diseases and Swallowing, University of North Carolina School of Medicine at Chapel Hill, North Carolina, told GI & Hepatology News.
“Almost 20% of patients who harbor BE were only identified by WATS-3D and might have otherwise gone undiagnosed had only forceps biopsies been performed,” Shaheen said.
The study was published in The American Journal of Gastroenterology.
Beyond Traditional Biopsies
BE develops as a complication of chronic GERD and is the chief precursor to esophageal adenocarcinoma. Early detection of BE and dysplasia is crucial to enable timely intervention.
The current gold standard for BE screening involves upper endoscopy with FB following the Seattle protocol, which consists of four-quadrant biopsies from every 1-2 cm of areas of columnar-lined epithelium (CLE) to confirm the presence of intestinal metaplasia. However, this protocol is prone to sampling errors and high false-negative rates, leading to repeat endoscopy, the study team pointed out.
WATS-3D (CDx Diagnostics) is a complementary technique designed to improve diagnostic yield by using brush biopsy to sample more tissue than routine biopsies.
WATS-3D has been shown to increase detection of dysplasia in patients with BE undergoing surveillance for BE, but less is known about the value of WATS-3D for BE screening in a community-based cohort of patients with GERD.
To investigate, Shaheen and colleagues studied 23,933 consecutive patients enrolled in a prospective observational registry assessing the utility of WATS-3D in the screening of symptomatic GERD patients for BE.
Patients had both WATS-3D and FB in the same endoscopic session. No patient had a history of BE, intestinal metaplasia or dysplasia in esophageal mucosa, or esophageal surgery, endoscopic ablation or endoscopic mucosal resection prior to enrollment.
Overall, 6829 patients (29%) met endoscopic criteria for BE (≥ 1 cm esophageal CLE with accompanying biopsies showing intestinal metaplasia).
Of these, 2878 (42%) had intestinal metaplasia identified by either FB or WATS-3D, but 19.3% had their BE diagnosis confirmed solely on the basis of WATS-3D findings.
Among patients who fulfilled the endoscopic criteria for BE, the adjunctive yield of WATS-3D was 76.5% and the absolute yield was 18.1%.
Of the 240 (1.0%) patients with dysplasia, 107 (45%) were found solely by WATS-3D.
‘Clinically Valuable Adjunct’
Among patients with positive WATS-3D but negative FB results, clinical management changed in 90.7% of cases, mostly involving initiation or modification of surveillance and proton pump inhibitor therapy.
These results suggest that WATS-3D is a “clinically valuable adjunct” to FB for the diagnosis of BE when used as a screening tool in symptomatic GERD patients and particularly in patients with endoscopic evidence of > 1 cm esophageal columnar-lined epithelium, the study team wrote.
Adjunctive use of WATS-3D when BE is suspected “may save endoscopies and lead to quicker, more accurate diagnoses,” they added.
The investigators said a limitation of the study is the lack of central pathology review, potentially leading to diagnostic variability. They also noted that over half of the detected dysplasia cases were crypt dysplasia or indefinite for dysplasia, raising concerns about clinical significance.
Reached for comment, Philip O. Katz, MD, AGAF, professor of medicine and director of the GI Function Laboratories, Weill Cornell Medicine in New York, said he’s been using WATS for more than a decade as an adjunct to standard biopsy in patients undergoing screening and surveillance for BE and finds it clinically helpful in managing his patients.
This new study provides “further information that WATS added to biopsy that has been traditionally done with the Seattle protocol increases the yield of intestinal metaplasia and likely dysplasia in patients being screened for Barrett’s,” Katz, who wasn’t involved in the study, told GI & Hepatology News.
Funding for the study was provided by CDx Diagnostics. Shaheen and several coauthors disclosed relationships with the company. Katz disclosed relationships (consultant/advisor) for Phathom Pharmaceuticals and Sebella.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
, new research showed.
Compared with forceps biopsies (FB) alone, the addition of WATS-3D led to confirmation of BE in an additional one fifth of patients, roughly doubled dysplasia diagnoses, and influenced clinical management in the majority of patients.
“The big take-home point here is that the use of WATS-3D brushing along with conventional biopsies increases the likelihood that intestinal metaplasia will be identified,” first author Nicholas Shaheen, MD, MPH, AGAF, with the Center for Esophageal Diseases and Swallowing, University of North Carolina School of Medicine at Chapel Hill, North Carolina, told GI & Hepatology News.
“Almost 20% of patients who harbor BE were only identified by WATS-3D and might have otherwise gone undiagnosed had only forceps biopsies been performed,” Shaheen said.
The study was published in The American Journal of Gastroenterology.
Beyond Traditional Biopsies
BE develops as a complication of chronic GERD and is the chief precursor to esophageal adenocarcinoma. Early detection of BE and dysplasia is crucial to enable timely intervention.
The current gold standard for BE screening involves upper endoscopy with FB following the Seattle protocol, which consists of four-quadrant biopsies from every 1-2 cm of areas of columnar-lined epithelium (CLE) to confirm the presence of intestinal metaplasia. However, this protocol is prone to sampling errors and high false-negative rates, leading to repeat endoscopy, the study team pointed out.
WATS-3D (CDx Diagnostics) is a complementary technique designed to improve diagnostic yield by using brush biopsy to sample more tissue than routine biopsies.
WATS-3D has been shown to increase detection of dysplasia in patients with BE undergoing surveillance for BE, but less is known about the value of WATS-3D for BE screening in a community-based cohort of patients with GERD.
To investigate, Shaheen and colleagues studied 23,933 consecutive patients enrolled in a prospective observational registry assessing the utility of WATS-3D in the screening of symptomatic GERD patients for BE.
Patients had both WATS-3D and FB in the same endoscopic session. No patient had a history of BE, intestinal metaplasia or dysplasia in esophageal mucosa, or esophageal surgery, endoscopic ablation or endoscopic mucosal resection prior to enrollment.
Overall, 6829 patients (29%) met endoscopic criteria for BE (≥ 1 cm esophageal CLE with accompanying biopsies showing intestinal metaplasia).
Of these, 2878 (42%) had intestinal metaplasia identified by either FB or WATS-3D, but 19.3% had their BE diagnosis confirmed solely on the basis of WATS-3D findings.
Among patients who fulfilled the endoscopic criteria for BE, the adjunctive yield of WATS-3D was 76.5% and the absolute yield was 18.1%.
Of the 240 (1.0%) patients with dysplasia, 107 (45%) were found solely by WATS-3D.
‘Clinically Valuable Adjunct’
Among patients with positive WATS-3D but negative FB results, clinical management changed in 90.7% of cases, mostly involving initiation or modification of surveillance and proton pump inhibitor therapy.
These results suggest that WATS-3D is a “clinically valuable adjunct” to FB for the diagnosis of BE when used as a screening tool in symptomatic GERD patients and particularly in patients with endoscopic evidence of > 1 cm esophageal columnar-lined epithelium, the study team wrote.
Adjunctive use of WATS-3D when BE is suspected “may save endoscopies and lead to quicker, more accurate diagnoses,” they added.
The investigators said a limitation of the study is the lack of central pathology review, potentially leading to diagnostic variability. They also noted that over half of the detected dysplasia cases were crypt dysplasia or indefinite for dysplasia, raising concerns about clinical significance.
Reached for comment, Philip O. Katz, MD, AGAF, professor of medicine and director of the GI Function Laboratories, Weill Cornell Medicine in New York, said he’s been using WATS for more than a decade as an adjunct to standard biopsy in patients undergoing screening and surveillance for BE and finds it clinically helpful in managing his patients.
This new study provides “further information that WATS added to biopsy that has been traditionally done with the Seattle protocol increases the yield of intestinal metaplasia and likely dysplasia in patients being screened for Barrett’s,” Katz, who wasn’t involved in the study, told GI & Hepatology News.
Funding for the study was provided by CDx Diagnostics. Shaheen and several coauthors disclosed relationships with the company. Katz disclosed relationships (consultant/advisor) for Phathom Pharmaceuticals and Sebella.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Better Prep, Better Scope: Task Force Updates Colonoscopy Bowel Prep Advice
The latest consensus recommendations emphasize the importance of verbal and written patient education, refine diet restrictions, update optimal purgative regimens, and advise tracking bowel prep adequacy rates at both the individual endoscopist and unit levels.
“Colorectal cancer remains the second most common cause of cancer death in the United States, and colonoscopy is considered the gold standard for evaluating the colon, including assessing causes of colon-related signs or symptoms and the detection of precancerous lesions. It is well recognized that the adequacy of bowel preparation is essential for optimal colonoscopy performance,” the task force wrote.
Choice of Prep, Dosing and Timing, and Dietary Restrictions
When choosing bowel preparation regimens, the task force recommends considering the individual’s medical history, medications, and, when available, the adequacy of bowel preparation reported from prior colonoscopies. Other considerations include patient preference, associated additional costs to the patient, and ease in obtaining and consuming any purgatives or adjuncts.
In terms of timing and dose, the task force now “suggests that lower-volume bowel preparation regimens, such as those that rely on only 2 liters of fluid compared to the traditional 4L, are acceptable options for individuals considered unlikely to have an inadequate bowel preparation. This assumes that the purgative is taken in a split-dose fashion (half the evening prior to colonoscopy and half the morning of the colonoscopy),” co–lead author Brian C. Jacobson, MD, MPH, AGAF, with Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, both in Boston, said in an interview.
The task force also states that a same-day bowel preparation regimen for afternoon, but not morning, colonoscopy is a “reasonable alternative to the now-common split-dose regimen,” Jacobson said.
The group did not find one bowel preparation purgative to be better than others, although table 7 in the document details characteristics of commonly used prep regimens including their side effects and contraindications.
Recommendations regarding dietary modifications depend upon the patient’s risk for inadequate bowel prep. For patients at low risk for inadequate bowel prep, the task force recommends limiting dietary restrictions to the day before a colonoscopy, relying on either clear liquids or low-fiber/low-residue diets for the early and midday meals. Table 5 in the document provides a list of low-residue foods and sample meals.
The task force also suggests the adjunctive use of oral simethicone (≥ 320 mg) to bowel prep as a way to potentially improve visualization, although they acknowledge that further research is needed.
How might these updated consensus recommendations change current clinical practice?
Jacobson said: “Some physicians may try to identify individuals who will do just as well with a more patient-friendly, easily tolerated bowel preparation regimen, including less stringent dietary restrictions leading up to colonoscopy.”
He noted that the task force prefers the term “guidance” to “guidelines.”
New Quality Benchmark
The task force recommends documenting bowel prep quality in the endoscopy report after all washing and suctioning have been completed using reliably understood descriptors that communicate the adequacy of the preparation.
They recommend the term “adequate bowel preparation” be used to indicate that standard screening or surveillance intervals can be assigned based on the findings of the colonoscopy.
Additionally, the task force recommends that endoscopy units and individual endoscopists track and aim for ≥ 90% adequacy rates in bowel preparation — up from the 85% benchmark contained in the prior recommendations.
Jacobson told this news organization it’s “currently unknown” how many individual endoscopists and endoscopy units track and meet the 90% benchmark at present.
David Johnson, MD, professor of medicine and chief of gastroenterology at Eastern Virginia Medical School, Norfolk, who wasn’t on the task force, said endoscopy units and providers “need to be accountable and should be tracking this quality metric.”
Johnson noted that bowel prep inadequacy has “intrinsic costs,” impacting lesion detection, CRC incidence, and patient outcomes. Inadequate prep leads to “increased risk for morbidity, mortality, longer appointment and wait times for rescheduling, and negative connotations that may deter patients from returning.”
Brian Sullivan, MD, MHS, assistant professor of medicine, division of gastroenterology, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina, who wasn’t on the task force, said the recommendation to target a 90% or higher bowel preparation adequacy rate is “appreciated.”
“This benchmark encourages practices to standardize measurement, tracking, and reporting of preparation quality at both the individual and unit levels. Specifically, it should motivate providers to critically evaluate their interpretation of preparation quality and ensure adequate cleansing before making determinations,” Sullivan said in an interview.
“At the unit level, this metric can identify whether there are opportunities for quality improvement, such as by implementing evidence-based initiatives (provided in the guidance) to enhance outpatient preparation processes,” Sullivan noted.
The task force emphasized that the majority of consensus recommendations focus on individuals at average risk for inadequate bowel prep. Patients at high risk for inadequate bowel prep (eg, diabetes, constipation, opioid use) should receive tailored instructions, including a more extended dietary prep and high-volume purgatives.
‘Timely and Important’ Updates
Sullivan said the updated consensus recommendations on optimizing bowel preparation quality for colonoscopy are both “timely and important.”
“Clear guidance facilitates dissemination and adoption, promoting flexible yet evidence-based approaches that enhance patient and provider satisfaction while potentially improving CRC prevention outcomes. For instance, surveys reveal that some practices still do not utilize split-dose bowel preparation, which is proven to improve preparation quality, particularly for the right-side of the colon. This gap underscores the need for standardized guidance to ensure high-quality colonoscopy and effective CRC screening,” Sullivan said.
He also noted that the inclusion of lower-volume bowel prep regimens and less intensive dietary modifications for selected patients is a “welcome update.”
“These options can improve patient adherence and satisfaction, which are critical not only for the quality of the index exam but also for ensuring patients return for future screenings, thereby supporting long-term CRC prevention efforts,” Sullivan said.
The task force includes representatives from the American Gastroenterological Association, the American College of Gastroenterology, and the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy.
The consensus document was published online in the three societies’ respective scientific journals — Gastroenterology, the American Journal of Gastroenterology, and Gastrointestinal Endsocopy.
This research had no financial support. Jacobson is a consultant for Curis and Guardant Health. Sullivan had no disclosures. Johnson is an adviser to ISOThrive and a past president of the American College of Gastroenterology.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The latest consensus recommendations emphasize the importance of verbal and written patient education, refine diet restrictions, update optimal purgative regimens, and advise tracking bowel prep adequacy rates at both the individual endoscopist and unit levels.
“Colorectal cancer remains the second most common cause of cancer death in the United States, and colonoscopy is considered the gold standard for evaluating the colon, including assessing causes of colon-related signs or symptoms and the detection of precancerous lesions. It is well recognized that the adequacy of bowel preparation is essential for optimal colonoscopy performance,” the task force wrote.
Choice of Prep, Dosing and Timing, and Dietary Restrictions
When choosing bowel preparation regimens, the task force recommends considering the individual’s medical history, medications, and, when available, the adequacy of bowel preparation reported from prior colonoscopies. Other considerations include patient preference, associated additional costs to the patient, and ease in obtaining and consuming any purgatives or adjuncts.
In terms of timing and dose, the task force now “suggests that lower-volume bowel preparation regimens, such as those that rely on only 2 liters of fluid compared to the traditional 4L, are acceptable options for individuals considered unlikely to have an inadequate bowel preparation. This assumes that the purgative is taken in a split-dose fashion (half the evening prior to colonoscopy and half the morning of the colonoscopy),” co–lead author Brian C. Jacobson, MD, MPH, AGAF, with Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, both in Boston, said in an interview.
The task force also states that a same-day bowel preparation regimen for afternoon, but not morning, colonoscopy is a “reasonable alternative to the now-common split-dose regimen,” Jacobson said.
The group did not find one bowel preparation purgative to be better than others, although table 7 in the document details characteristics of commonly used prep regimens including their side effects and contraindications.
Recommendations regarding dietary modifications depend upon the patient’s risk for inadequate bowel prep. For patients at low risk for inadequate bowel prep, the task force recommends limiting dietary restrictions to the day before a colonoscopy, relying on either clear liquids or low-fiber/low-residue diets for the early and midday meals. Table 5 in the document provides a list of low-residue foods and sample meals.
The task force also suggests the adjunctive use of oral simethicone (≥ 320 mg) to bowel prep as a way to potentially improve visualization, although they acknowledge that further research is needed.
How might these updated consensus recommendations change current clinical practice?
Jacobson said: “Some physicians may try to identify individuals who will do just as well with a more patient-friendly, easily tolerated bowel preparation regimen, including less stringent dietary restrictions leading up to colonoscopy.”
He noted that the task force prefers the term “guidance” to “guidelines.”
New Quality Benchmark
The task force recommends documenting bowel prep quality in the endoscopy report after all washing and suctioning have been completed using reliably understood descriptors that communicate the adequacy of the preparation.
They recommend the term “adequate bowel preparation” be used to indicate that standard screening or surveillance intervals can be assigned based on the findings of the colonoscopy.
Additionally, the task force recommends that endoscopy units and individual endoscopists track and aim for ≥ 90% adequacy rates in bowel preparation — up from the 85% benchmark contained in the prior recommendations.
Jacobson told this news organization it’s “currently unknown” how many individual endoscopists and endoscopy units track and meet the 90% benchmark at present.
David Johnson, MD, professor of medicine and chief of gastroenterology at Eastern Virginia Medical School, Norfolk, who wasn’t on the task force, said endoscopy units and providers “need to be accountable and should be tracking this quality metric.”
Johnson noted that bowel prep inadequacy has “intrinsic costs,” impacting lesion detection, CRC incidence, and patient outcomes. Inadequate prep leads to “increased risk for morbidity, mortality, longer appointment and wait times for rescheduling, and negative connotations that may deter patients from returning.”
Brian Sullivan, MD, MHS, assistant professor of medicine, division of gastroenterology, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina, who wasn’t on the task force, said the recommendation to target a 90% or higher bowel preparation adequacy rate is “appreciated.”
“This benchmark encourages practices to standardize measurement, tracking, and reporting of preparation quality at both the individual and unit levels. Specifically, it should motivate providers to critically evaluate their interpretation of preparation quality and ensure adequate cleansing before making determinations,” Sullivan said in an interview.
“At the unit level, this metric can identify whether there are opportunities for quality improvement, such as by implementing evidence-based initiatives (provided in the guidance) to enhance outpatient preparation processes,” Sullivan noted.
The task force emphasized that the majority of consensus recommendations focus on individuals at average risk for inadequate bowel prep. Patients at high risk for inadequate bowel prep (eg, diabetes, constipation, opioid use) should receive tailored instructions, including a more extended dietary prep and high-volume purgatives.
‘Timely and Important’ Updates
Sullivan said the updated consensus recommendations on optimizing bowel preparation quality for colonoscopy are both “timely and important.”
“Clear guidance facilitates dissemination and adoption, promoting flexible yet evidence-based approaches that enhance patient and provider satisfaction while potentially improving CRC prevention outcomes. For instance, surveys reveal that some practices still do not utilize split-dose bowel preparation, which is proven to improve preparation quality, particularly for the right-side of the colon. This gap underscores the need for standardized guidance to ensure high-quality colonoscopy and effective CRC screening,” Sullivan said.
He also noted that the inclusion of lower-volume bowel prep regimens and less intensive dietary modifications for selected patients is a “welcome update.”
“These options can improve patient adherence and satisfaction, which are critical not only for the quality of the index exam but also for ensuring patients return for future screenings, thereby supporting long-term CRC prevention efforts,” Sullivan said.
The task force includes representatives from the American Gastroenterological Association, the American College of Gastroenterology, and the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy.
The consensus document was published online in the three societies’ respective scientific journals — Gastroenterology, the American Journal of Gastroenterology, and Gastrointestinal Endsocopy.
This research had no financial support. Jacobson is a consultant for Curis and Guardant Health. Sullivan had no disclosures. Johnson is an adviser to ISOThrive and a past president of the American College of Gastroenterology.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The latest consensus recommendations emphasize the importance of verbal and written patient education, refine diet restrictions, update optimal purgative regimens, and advise tracking bowel prep adequacy rates at both the individual endoscopist and unit levels.
“Colorectal cancer remains the second most common cause of cancer death in the United States, and colonoscopy is considered the gold standard for evaluating the colon, including assessing causes of colon-related signs or symptoms and the detection of precancerous lesions. It is well recognized that the adequacy of bowel preparation is essential for optimal colonoscopy performance,” the task force wrote.
Choice of Prep, Dosing and Timing, and Dietary Restrictions
When choosing bowel preparation regimens, the task force recommends considering the individual’s medical history, medications, and, when available, the adequacy of bowel preparation reported from prior colonoscopies. Other considerations include patient preference, associated additional costs to the patient, and ease in obtaining and consuming any purgatives or adjuncts.
In terms of timing and dose, the task force now “suggests that lower-volume bowel preparation regimens, such as those that rely on only 2 liters of fluid compared to the traditional 4L, are acceptable options for individuals considered unlikely to have an inadequate bowel preparation. This assumes that the purgative is taken in a split-dose fashion (half the evening prior to colonoscopy and half the morning of the colonoscopy),” co–lead author Brian C. Jacobson, MD, MPH, AGAF, with Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, both in Boston, said in an interview.
The task force also states that a same-day bowel preparation regimen for afternoon, but not morning, colonoscopy is a “reasonable alternative to the now-common split-dose regimen,” Jacobson said.
The group did not find one bowel preparation purgative to be better than others, although table 7 in the document details characteristics of commonly used prep regimens including their side effects and contraindications.
Recommendations regarding dietary modifications depend upon the patient’s risk for inadequate bowel prep. For patients at low risk for inadequate bowel prep, the task force recommends limiting dietary restrictions to the day before a colonoscopy, relying on either clear liquids or low-fiber/low-residue diets for the early and midday meals. Table 5 in the document provides a list of low-residue foods and sample meals.
The task force also suggests the adjunctive use of oral simethicone (≥ 320 mg) to bowel prep as a way to potentially improve visualization, although they acknowledge that further research is needed.
How might these updated consensus recommendations change current clinical practice?
Jacobson said: “Some physicians may try to identify individuals who will do just as well with a more patient-friendly, easily tolerated bowel preparation regimen, including less stringent dietary restrictions leading up to colonoscopy.”
He noted that the task force prefers the term “guidance” to “guidelines.”
New Quality Benchmark
The task force recommends documenting bowel prep quality in the endoscopy report after all washing and suctioning have been completed using reliably understood descriptors that communicate the adequacy of the preparation.
They recommend the term “adequate bowel preparation” be used to indicate that standard screening or surveillance intervals can be assigned based on the findings of the colonoscopy.
Additionally, the task force recommends that endoscopy units and individual endoscopists track and aim for ≥ 90% adequacy rates in bowel preparation — up from the 85% benchmark contained in the prior recommendations.
Jacobson told this news organization it’s “currently unknown” how many individual endoscopists and endoscopy units track and meet the 90% benchmark at present.
David Johnson, MD, professor of medicine and chief of gastroenterology at Eastern Virginia Medical School, Norfolk, who wasn’t on the task force, said endoscopy units and providers “need to be accountable and should be tracking this quality metric.”
Johnson noted that bowel prep inadequacy has “intrinsic costs,” impacting lesion detection, CRC incidence, and patient outcomes. Inadequate prep leads to “increased risk for morbidity, mortality, longer appointment and wait times for rescheduling, and negative connotations that may deter patients from returning.”
Brian Sullivan, MD, MHS, assistant professor of medicine, division of gastroenterology, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina, who wasn’t on the task force, said the recommendation to target a 90% or higher bowel preparation adequacy rate is “appreciated.”
“This benchmark encourages practices to standardize measurement, tracking, and reporting of preparation quality at both the individual and unit levels. Specifically, it should motivate providers to critically evaluate their interpretation of preparation quality and ensure adequate cleansing before making determinations,” Sullivan said in an interview.
“At the unit level, this metric can identify whether there are opportunities for quality improvement, such as by implementing evidence-based initiatives (provided in the guidance) to enhance outpatient preparation processes,” Sullivan noted.
The task force emphasized that the majority of consensus recommendations focus on individuals at average risk for inadequate bowel prep. Patients at high risk for inadequate bowel prep (eg, diabetes, constipation, opioid use) should receive tailored instructions, including a more extended dietary prep and high-volume purgatives.
‘Timely and Important’ Updates
Sullivan said the updated consensus recommendations on optimizing bowel preparation quality for colonoscopy are both “timely and important.”
“Clear guidance facilitates dissemination and adoption, promoting flexible yet evidence-based approaches that enhance patient and provider satisfaction while potentially improving CRC prevention outcomes. For instance, surveys reveal that some practices still do not utilize split-dose bowel preparation, which is proven to improve preparation quality, particularly for the right-side of the colon. This gap underscores the need for standardized guidance to ensure high-quality colonoscopy and effective CRC screening,” Sullivan said.
He also noted that the inclusion of lower-volume bowel prep regimens and less intensive dietary modifications for selected patients is a “welcome update.”
“These options can improve patient adherence and satisfaction, which are critical not only for the quality of the index exam but also for ensuring patients return for future screenings, thereby supporting long-term CRC prevention efforts,” Sullivan said.
The task force includes representatives from the American Gastroenterological Association, the American College of Gastroenterology, and the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy.
The consensus document was published online in the three societies’ respective scientific journals — Gastroenterology, the American Journal of Gastroenterology, and Gastrointestinal Endsocopy.
This research had no financial support. Jacobson is a consultant for Curis and Guardant Health. Sullivan had no disclosures. Johnson is an adviser to ISOThrive and a past president of the American College of Gastroenterology.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM GASTROENTEROLOGY
Identifying Pancreatic Cancer Remains Elusive: Here’s Why
Now, a growing body of evidence indicates that this deadly cancer has been steadily on the rise, particularly in younger individuals who may not even realize they are at risk.
A recent survey, for instance, found that 33% of 1000 respondents younger than 50 years believe that only older adults are at risk for pancreatic cancer, and more than half said they wouldn’t even recognize the early signs and symptoms, which include unexplained weight loss, fatigue, jaundice, abdominal pain that radiates to the back, nausea, and vomiting.
These survey findings allude to a bigger challenge: Identifying the disease remains elusive against a backdrop of these increasing rates and nonspecific risks and symptoms.
Currently, only about 15% of pancreatic cancers are caught at a localized, resectable stage, when 5-year survival rates are highest at 44%. But most are found later, after symptoms arise, and at this point, the 5-year survival odds plummet —16% for regional disease, 3% for distant, and 1% for stage IV.
“This disease is too often a silent killer, with no symptoms until it has progressed to less treatable stages,” said survey coauthor Zobeida Cruz-Monserrate, PhD, in the division of gastroenterology, hepatology and nutrition at Ohio State University Medical Center, Columbus.
Rising Rates
Since 2001, rates of pancreatic cancer have steadily increased by about 1% annually, and this increase appears greater among younger individuals, especially women.
A recent study in Gastroenterology, for instance, found that, while overall rates of pancreatic cancer among people aged 15-34 years remained low (0.3% in women and 0.2% in men) between 2001 and 2018, the average annual percent change in this age group was considerably higher than that for older individuals — 6.45% for women and 2.97% for men compared with 1.11% for women aged 55 years and 1.17% for men aged 55 years. Another recent analysis, published in Annals of Internal Medicine, reported similar increased rates in men and women aged 15-39 years between 2011 and 2019.
Although more than 90% of cases do occur in those 55 years or older, “we’re now seeing this disease in people who are in their 40s much more regularly,” Cruz-Monserrate said. “This is a concerning trend — and more research is needed to learn why.”
But it’s early days. Studies so far indicate that early onset pancreatic cancer tends to be even more aggressive, but the “underlying reason is not yet clear,” researcher wrote in a 2025 review.
Some evidence indicates younger individuals may have distinct molecular characteristics, whereas other research shows younger and older patients have similar genetic profiles. Younger patients may also be more likely to smoke, drink more, and delay seeking medical attention as well as experience delays in being diagnosed by physicians, the authors explained.
Catching It Early
Given the rising rates, early detection is especially important.
There are some known genetic and medical risk factors for pancreatic cancer. About 10% of these cancers are linked to heredity risk or genetic markers, including BRCA1 and BRCA2 or Lynch syndrome. People with chronic pancreatitis, type 2 diabetes, obesity, or with a family history of pancreatic cancer face an elevated risk.
Lifestyle factors can play a role as well. Alcohol consumption, a poor diet that includes red or processed meat, and smoking increase people’s risk for pancreatic cancer. In fact, smoking leads to a twofold higher risk, compared with not smoking.
However, uncovering pancreatic cancer from these factors alone can be like “finding a needle in a haystack,” said Srinivas Gaddam, MD, head of the pancreatic cancer screening and early detection program at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles.
One strategy to help detect the disease earlier would be to screen more.
The latest guidance from the American Cancer Society suggests that people with a genetic predisposition or a family history of pancreatic cancer could benefit from annual surveillance with endoscopic ultrasound or MRI.
But the US Preventive Services Task Force currently recommends against routine screening of average-risk asymptomatic adults (JAMA. 2019;322[5]:438-444). The task force found no evidence that screening for pancreatic cancer improves disease-specific morbidity or mortality or all-cause mortality.
“The absolute incidence in younger people is far too small to make screening beneficial,” explained The Lancet Gastroenterology & Hepatology editors in a 2023 editorial.
In fact, more screening could lead to overdiagnosis, a concern reinforced by the recent study in Annals of Internal Medicine. That analysis found that much of the observed increase in early-onset pancreatic cancer stemmed from the detection of more small, early-stage endocrine cancer, rather than pancreatic adenocarcinoma, whereas mortality from the disease remained stable over the study period.
Recent findings do “suggest the potential for overdiagnosis and overtreatment, particularly in cases of indolent pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors,” Gaddam said.
Gaddam has observed an increase in both adenocarcinoma and neuroendocrine tumors in the clinic and in his research, especially in women younger than 50 years, but he noted these early onset diagnoses do remain rare.
Staying Vigilant
As the understanding of pancreatic cancer risks and symptoms evolves, ensuring that patients, especially younger individuals, recognize the warning signs, without causing alarm, remains a challenge.
The disease “presents more advanced in younger patients, but symptoms are so nonspecific,” said Randall Brand, MD, AGAF, director of the gastrointestinal malignancy early detection, diagnosis, and prevention program at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pennsylvania. Given that, “I am not sure how to best highlight a communication approach that would not cause undue stress to the patient and our healthcare resources.”
Gaddam agreed that it’s tough to pinpoint or communicate straightforward risks or symptoms to the general public without potentially leading to unnecessary screening.
At a minimum, however, clinicians can share more general risk-mitigating strategies with their patients.
Communicating such strategies may be especially important for younger patients, given that the recent survey found almost 40% of younger adults believe there’s nothing they can do to change their risk for pancreatic cancer.
However, Cruz-Monserrate explained, adults of all ages can lower their risks through regular exercise, limited alcohol and tobacco use, and a healthy diet with less red meat or processed meat.
Ultimately, for clinicians, given how difficult it is now to identify pancreatic cancer early, we have to “follow their good clinical judgment when alarming features, such as weight loss or nuances of pancreatic pain arise, and then get good imaging,” Gaddam said.
Cruz-Monserrate, Brand, and Gaddam reported no relevant disclosures.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Now, a growing body of evidence indicates that this deadly cancer has been steadily on the rise, particularly in younger individuals who may not even realize they are at risk.
A recent survey, for instance, found that 33% of 1000 respondents younger than 50 years believe that only older adults are at risk for pancreatic cancer, and more than half said they wouldn’t even recognize the early signs and symptoms, which include unexplained weight loss, fatigue, jaundice, abdominal pain that radiates to the back, nausea, and vomiting.
These survey findings allude to a bigger challenge: Identifying the disease remains elusive against a backdrop of these increasing rates and nonspecific risks and symptoms.
Currently, only about 15% of pancreatic cancers are caught at a localized, resectable stage, when 5-year survival rates are highest at 44%. But most are found later, after symptoms arise, and at this point, the 5-year survival odds plummet —16% for regional disease, 3% for distant, and 1% for stage IV.
“This disease is too often a silent killer, with no symptoms until it has progressed to less treatable stages,” said survey coauthor Zobeida Cruz-Monserrate, PhD, in the division of gastroenterology, hepatology and nutrition at Ohio State University Medical Center, Columbus.
Rising Rates
Since 2001, rates of pancreatic cancer have steadily increased by about 1% annually, and this increase appears greater among younger individuals, especially women.
A recent study in Gastroenterology, for instance, found that, while overall rates of pancreatic cancer among people aged 15-34 years remained low (0.3% in women and 0.2% in men) between 2001 and 2018, the average annual percent change in this age group was considerably higher than that for older individuals — 6.45% for women and 2.97% for men compared with 1.11% for women aged 55 years and 1.17% for men aged 55 years. Another recent analysis, published in Annals of Internal Medicine, reported similar increased rates in men and women aged 15-39 years between 2011 and 2019.
Although more than 90% of cases do occur in those 55 years or older, “we’re now seeing this disease in people who are in their 40s much more regularly,” Cruz-Monserrate said. “This is a concerning trend — and more research is needed to learn why.”
But it’s early days. Studies so far indicate that early onset pancreatic cancer tends to be even more aggressive, but the “underlying reason is not yet clear,” researcher wrote in a 2025 review.
Some evidence indicates younger individuals may have distinct molecular characteristics, whereas other research shows younger and older patients have similar genetic profiles. Younger patients may also be more likely to smoke, drink more, and delay seeking medical attention as well as experience delays in being diagnosed by physicians, the authors explained.
Catching It Early
Given the rising rates, early detection is especially important.
There are some known genetic and medical risk factors for pancreatic cancer. About 10% of these cancers are linked to heredity risk or genetic markers, including BRCA1 and BRCA2 or Lynch syndrome. People with chronic pancreatitis, type 2 diabetes, obesity, or with a family history of pancreatic cancer face an elevated risk.
Lifestyle factors can play a role as well. Alcohol consumption, a poor diet that includes red or processed meat, and smoking increase people’s risk for pancreatic cancer. In fact, smoking leads to a twofold higher risk, compared with not smoking.
However, uncovering pancreatic cancer from these factors alone can be like “finding a needle in a haystack,” said Srinivas Gaddam, MD, head of the pancreatic cancer screening and early detection program at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles.
One strategy to help detect the disease earlier would be to screen more.
The latest guidance from the American Cancer Society suggests that people with a genetic predisposition or a family history of pancreatic cancer could benefit from annual surveillance with endoscopic ultrasound or MRI.
But the US Preventive Services Task Force currently recommends against routine screening of average-risk asymptomatic adults (JAMA. 2019;322[5]:438-444). The task force found no evidence that screening for pancreatic cancer improves disease-specific morbidity or mortality or all-cause mortality.
“The absolute incidence in younger people is far too small to make screening beneficial,” explained The Lancet Gastroenterology & Hepatology editors in a 2023 editorial.
In fact, more screening could lead to overdiagnosis, a concern reinforced by the recent study in Annals of Internal Medicine. That analysis found that much of the observed increase in early-onset pancreatic cancer stemmed from the detection of more small, early-stage endocrine cancer, rather than pancreatic adenocarcinoma, whereas mortality from the disease remained stable over the study period.
Recent findings do “suggest the potential for overdiagnosis and overtreatment, particularly in cases of indolent pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors,” Gaddam said.
Gaddam has observed an increase in both adenocarcinoma and neuroendocrine tumors in the clinic and in his research, especially in women younger than 50 years, but he noted these early onset diagnoses do remain rare.
Staying Vigilant
As the understanding of pancreatic cancer risks and symptoms evolves, ensuring that patients, especially younger individuals, recognize the warning signs, without causing alarm, remains a challenge.
The disease “presents more advanced in younger patients, but symptoms are so nonspecific,” said Randall Brand, MD, AGAF, director of the gastrointestinal malignancy early detection, diagnosis, and prevention program at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pennsylvania. Given that, “I am not sure how to best highlight a communication approach that would not cause undue stress to the patient and our healthcare resources.”
Gaddam agreed that it’s tough to pinpoint or communicate straightforward risks or symptoms to the general public without potentially leading to unnecessary screening.
At a minimum, however, clinicians can share more general risk-mitigating strategies with their patients.
Communicating such strategies may be especially important for younger patients, given that the recent survey found almost 40% of younger adults believe there’s nothing they can do to change their risk for pancreatic cancer.
However, Cruz-Monserrate explained, adults of all ages can lower their risks through regular exercise, limited alcohol and tobacco use, and a healthy diet with less red meat or processed meat.
Ultimately, for clinicians, given how difficult it is now to identify pancreatic cancer early, we have to “follow their good clinical judgment when alarming features, such as weight loss or nuances of pancreatic pain arise, and then get good imaging,” Gaddam said.
Cruz-Monserrate, Brand, and Gaddam reported no relevant disclosures.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Now, a growing body of evidence indicates that this deadly cancer has been steadily on the rise, particularly in younger individuals who may not even realize they are at risk.
A recent survey, for instance, found that 33% of 1000 respondents younger than 50 years believe that only older adults are at risk for pancreatic cancer, and more than half said they wouldn’t even recognize the early signs and symptoms, which include unexplained weight loss, fatigue, jaundice, abdominal pain that radiates to the back, nausea, and vomiting.
These survey findings allude to a bigger challenge: Identifying the disease remains elusive against a backdrop of these increasing rates and nonspecific risks and symptoms.
Currently, only about 15% of pancreatic cancers are caught at a localized, resectable stage, when 5-year survival rates are highest at 44%. But most are found later, after symptoms arise, and at this point, the 5-year survival odds plummet —16% for regional disease, 3% for distant, and 1% for stage IV.
“This disease is too often a silent killer, with no symptoms until it has progressed to less treatable stages,” said survey coauthor Zobeida Cruz-Monserrate, PhD, in the division of gastroenterology, hepatology and nutrition at Ohio State University Medical Center, Columbus.
Rising Rates
Since 2001, rates of pancreatic cancer have steadily increased by about 1% annually, and this increase appears greater among younger individuals, especially women.
A recent study in Gastroenterology, for instance, found that, while overall rates of pancreatic cancer among people aged 15-34 years remained low (0.3% in women and 0.2% in men) between 2001 and 2018, the average annual percent change in this age group was considerably higher than that for older individuals — 6.45% for women and 2.97% for men compared with 1.11% for women aged 55 years and 1.17% for men aged 55 years. Another recent analysis, published in Annals of Internal Medicine, reported similar increased rates in men and women aged 15-39 years between 2011 and 2019.
Although more than 90% of cases do occur in those 55 years or older, “we’re now seeing this disease in people who are in their 40s much more regularly,” Cruz-Monserrate said. “This is a concerning trend — and more research is needed to learn why.”
But it’s early days. Studies so far indicate that early onset pancreatic cancer tends to be even more aggressive, but the “underlying reason is not yet clear,” researcher wrote in a 2025 review.
Some evidence indicates younger individuals may have distinct molecular characteristics, whereas other research shows younger and older patients have similar genetic profiles. Younger patients may also be more likely to smoke, drink more, and delay seeking medical attention as well as experience delays in being diagnosed by physicians, the authors explained.
Catching It Early
Given the rising rates, early detection is especially important.
There are some known genetic and medical risk factors for pancreatic cancer. About 10% of these cancers are linked to heredity risk or genetic markers, including BRCA1 and BRCA2 or Lynch syndrome. People with chronic pancreatitis, type 2 diabetes, obesity, or with a family history of pancreatic cancer face an elevated risk.
Lifestyle factors can play a role as well. Alcohol consumption, a poor diet that includes red or processed meat, and smoking increase people’s risk for pancreatic cancer. In fact, smoking leads to a twofold higher risk, compared with not smoking.
However, uncovering pancreatic cancer from these factors alone can be like “finding a needle in a haystack,” said Srinivas Gaddam, MD, head of the pancreatic cancer screening and early detection program at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles.
One strategy to help detect the disease earlier would be to screen more.
The latest guidance from the American Cancer Society suggests that people with a genetic predisposition or a family history of pancreatic cancer could benefit from annual surveillance with endoscopic ultrasound or MRI.
But the US Preventive Services Task Force currently recommends against routine screening of average-risk asymptomatic adults (JAMA. 2019;322[5]:438-444). The task force found no evidence that screening for pancreatic cancer improves disease-specific morbidity or mortality or all-cause mortality.
“The absolute incidence in younger people is far too small to make screening beneficial,” explained The Lancet Gastroenterology & Hepatology editors in a 2023 editorial.
In fact, more screening could lead to overdiagnosis, a concern reinforced by the recent study in Annals of Internal Medicine. That analysis found that much of the observed increase in early-onset pancreatic cancer stemmed from the detection of more small, early-stage endocrine cancer, rather than pancreatic adenocarcinoma, whereas mortality from the disease remained stable over the study period.
Recent findings do “suggest the potential for overdiagnosis and overtreatment, particularly in cases of indolent pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors,” Gaddam said.
Gaddam has observed an increase in both adenocarcinoma and neuroendocrine tumors in the clinic and in his research, especially in women younger than 50 years, but he noted these early onset diagnoses do remain rare.
Staying Vigilant
As the understanding of pancreatic cancer risks and symptoms evolves, ensuring that patients, especially younger individuals, recognize the warning signs, without causing alarm, remains a challenge.
The disease “presents more advanced in younger patients, but symptoms are so nonspecific,” said Randall Brand, MD, AGAF, director of the gastrointestinal malignancy early detection, diagnosis, and prevention program at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pennsylvania. Given that, “I am not sure how to best highlight a communication approach that would not cause undue stress to the patient and our healthcare resources.”
Gaddam agreed that it’s tough to pinpoint or communicate straightforward risks or symptoms to the general public without potentially leading to unnecessary screening.
At a minimum, however, clinicians can share more general risk-mitigating strategies with their patients.
Communicating such strategies may be especially important for younger patients, given that the recent survey found almost 40% of younger adults believe there’s nothing they can do to change their risk for pancreatic cancer.
However, Cruz-Monserrate explained, adults of all ages can lower their risks through regular exercise, limited alcohol and tobacco use, and a healthy diet with less red meat or processed meat.
Ultimately, for clinicians, given how difficult it is now to identify pancreatic cancer early, we have to “follow their good clinical judgment when alarming features, such as weight loss or nuances of pancreatic pain arise, and then get good imaging,” Gaddam said.
Cruz-Monserrate, Brand, and Gaddam reported no relevant disclosures.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Virtual Chromoendoscopy Beats Other Modalities at Neoplasia Detection in IBD
BERLIN —
The research, presented at the European Crohn’s and Colitis Organisation (ECCO) 2025 Congress, also found “significant variability in IBD surveillance practice in the real world,” said study presenter Chandni Radia, MD, Department of Gastroenterology, King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, London, England.
Although dye chromoendoscopy with targeted biopsies traditionally was considered the gold standard for neoplasia detection in patients with IBD, randomized trials have challenged its superiority over virtual chromoendoscopy and high-definition white-light endoscopy, the researchers noted. They hypothesized that the modality used would not affect the neoplasia detection rate.
To investigate, they conducted a retrospective observational cohort study of adults with ulcerative colitis, Crohn’s disease or primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) who underwent routine clinical IBD surveillance at one of five centers in the United Kingdom between 2019 and 2023. They examined data from the endoscopy reporting software, alongside endoscopy reports, endoscopy images, and electronic patient records.
In all, 2673 colonoscopies performed on 2050 patients were included, with 1032 procedures using dye chromoendoscopy, 366 using virtual chromoendoscopy, and 1275 using high-definition white-light endoscopy.
The overall neoplasia detection rate was 11.4%, “which is very similar to what has previously been seen in the literature,” Radia said.
However, the detection rate varied significantly by procedure: 19% in virtual chromoendoscopy, 12% in dye chromoendoscopy, and 9% in white-light endoscopy (P < .001). After accounting for a range of potential confounding factors, virtual chromoendoscopy still had the highest neoplasia detection rate.
Dye chromoendoscopy had a “prolonged withdrawal time and increased need for targeted biopsies without improving their neoplasia yield, which goes against our aspirations of sustainability,” Radia noted.
“It was interesting to see that the procedures with the most dye chromoendoscopy seem to have the longest withdrawal time, and those with the most white-light endoscopy seem to have the shortest,” she said. The difference remained significant even after controlling for procedures with polypectomy, “which has a significantly longer withdrawal time compared to procedures without.”
Results Varied by Center
There was wide variability between the five centers on several findings. The neoplasia detection rate ranged from 7.4% to 17.2%, depending on the center.
The surveillance method also varied. One center, for example, used white-light endoscopy in 82% of cases and dye chromoendoscopy in the other 18%. At another center, 61% of patients had dye chromoendoscopy, 36% white-light endoscopy, and 3% virtual chromoendoscopy. In a third center, 48% had virtual chromoendoscopy, 46% white-light endoscopy, and 6% dye chromoendoscopy.
The centers had varying proportions of patients with each of the three conditions, with ulcerative colitis ranging from 46% to 63%, Crohn’s disease from 9% to 39%, and PSC from 14% to 45%.
The heterogeneity of patients between the modality groups is one of the study’s limitations, Radia said. Others are the shorter withdrawal time with white-light endoscopy and the lack of standardized withdrawal time for the procedures.
The research team’s analyses are ongoing and include examination of the types of neoplasia detected, as well as accounting for endoscopist experience and patients who underwent two procedures with different modalities, Radia said.
Reflection of ‘Real-Life Practice’
Because the study was a retrospective analysis, it contains inherent biases and other issues, Raf Bisschops, MD, PhD, director of endoscopy, University of Leuven, Belgium, who co-chaired the session, said in an interview.
However, it was a “thorough analysis” that reflects “real-life practice,” he said. As such, it lends “huge support” to virtual chromoendoscopy, which “actually goes against the new [British Society of Gastroenterology] guideline that is about to come out.” The society plans to recommend in favor of dye chromoendoscopy, but the new study findings could be still incorporated into the upcoming guidelines so as to also endorse virtual chromoendoscopy.
Whatever the modality used, clinicians need to make sure they “pay attention” when looking for small neoplastic lesions, and “anything that can help you do that, that draws your attention to cell lesions ... can be helpful,” Bisschops said.
Performing targeted biopsies, as with dye chromoendoscopy, can be problematic, as “people don’t pay attention anymore to those cell lesions; they just focus on taking the 32 biopsies, which is a huge endeavor and it’s a pain to do it,” he added.
Radia has received a Research Training Fellowship Award from the UK patient organization PSC Support. No other funding was declared. Radia declared relationships with Abbvie, Galapogos, and Dr. Falk Pharma.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
BERLIN —
The research, presented at the European Crohn’s and Colitis Organisation (ECCO) 2025 Congress, also found “significant variability in IBD surveillance practice in the real world,” said study presenter Chandni Radia, MD, Department of Gastroenterology, King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, London, England.
Although dye chromoendoscopy with targeted biopsies traditionally was considered the gold standard for neoplasia detection in patients with IBD, randomized trials have challenged its superiority over virtual chromoendoscopy and high-definition white-light endoscopy, the researchers noted. They hypothesized that the modality used would not affect the neoplasia detection rate.
To investigate, they conducted a retrospective observational cohort study of adults with ulcerative colitis, Crohn’s disease or primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) who underwent routine clinical IBD surveillance at one of five centers in the United Kingdom between 2019 and 2023. They examined data from the endoscopy reporting software, alongside endoscopy reports, endoscopy images, and electronic patient records.
In all, 2673 colonoscopies performed on 2050 patients were included, with 1032 procedures using dye chromoendoscopy, 366 using virtual chromoendoscopy, and 1275 using high-definition white-light endoscopy.
The overall neoplasia detection rate was 11.4%, “which is very similar to what has previously been seen in the literature,” Radia said.
However, the detection rate varied significantly by procedure: 19% in virtual chromoendoscopy, 12% in dye chromoendoscopy, and 9% in white-light endoscopy (P < .001). After accounting for a range of potential confounding factors, virtual chromoendoscopy still had the highest neoplasia detection rate.
Dye chromoendoscopy had a “prolonged withdrawal time and increased need for targeted biopsies without improving their neoplasia yield, which goes against our aspirations of sustainability,” Radia noted.
“It was interesting to see that the procedures with the most dye chromoendoscopy seem to have the longest withdrawal time, and those with the most white-light endoscopy seem to have the shortest,” she said. The difference remained significant even after controlling for procedures with polypectomy, “which has a significantly longer withdrawal time compared to procedures without.”
Results Varied by Center
There was wide variability between the five centers on several findings. The neoplasia detection rate ranged from 7.4% to 17.2%, depending on the center.
The surveillance method also varied. One center, for example, used white-light endoscopy in 82% of cases and dye chromoendoscopy in the other 18%. At another center, 61% of patients had dye chromoendoscopy, 36% white-light endoscopy, and 3% virtual chromoendoscopy. In a third center, 48% had virtual chromoendoscopy, 46% white-light endoscopy, and 6% dye chromoendoscopy.
The centers had varying proportions of patients with each of the three conditions, with ulcerative colitis ranging from 46% to 63%, Crohn’s disease from 9% to 39%, and PSC from 14% to 45%.
The heterogeneity of patients between the modality groups is one of the study’s limitations, Radia said. Others are the shorter withdrawal time with white-light endoscopy and the lack of standardized withdrawal time for the procedures.
The research team’s analyses are ongoing and include examination of the types of neoplasia detected, as well as accounting for endoscopist experience and patients who underwent two procedures with different modalities, Radia said.
Reflection of ‘Real-Life Practice’
Because the study was a retrospective analysis, it contains inherent biases and other issues, Raf Bisschops, MD, PhD, director of endoscopy, University of Leuven, Belgium, who co-chaired the session, said in an interview.
However, it was a “thorough analysis” that reflects “real-life practice,” he said. As such, it lends “huge support” to virtual chromoendoscopy, which “actually goes against the new [British Society of Gastroenterology] guideline that is about to come out.” The society plans to recommend in favor of dye chromoendoscopy, but the new study findings could be still incorporated into the upcoming guidelines so as to also endorse virtual chromoendoscopy.
Whatever the modality used, clinicians need to make sure they “pay attention” when looking for small neoplastic lesions, and “anything that can help you do that, that draws your attention to cell lesions ... can be helpful,” Bisschops said.
Performing targeted biopsies, as with dye chromoendoscopy, can be problematic, as “people don’t pay attention anymore to those cell lesions; they just focus on taking the 32 biopsies, which is a huge endeavor and it’s a pain to do it,” he added.
Radia has received a Research Training Fellowship Award from the UK patient organization PSC Support. No other funding was declared. Radia declared relationships with Abbvie, Galapogos, and Dr. Falk Pharma.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
BERLIN —
The research, presented at the European Crohn’s and Colitis Organisation (ECCO) 2025 Congress, also found “significant variability in IBD surveillance practice in the real world,” said study presenter Chandni Radia, MD, Department of Gastroenterology, King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, London, England.
Although dye chromoendoscopy with targeted biopsies traditionally was considered the gold standard for neoplasia detection in patients with IBD, randomized trials have challenged its superiority over virtual chromoendoscopy and high-definition white-light endoscopy, the researchers noted. They hypothesized that the modality used would not affect the neoplasia detection rate.
To investigate, they conducted a retrospective observational cohort study of adults with ulcerative colitis, Crohn’s disease or primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) who underwent routine clinical IBD surveillance at one of five centers in the United Kingdom between 2019 and 2023. They examined data from the endoscopy reporting software, alongside endoscopy reports, endoscopy images, and electronic patient records.
In all, 2673 colonoscopies performed on 2050 patients were included, with 1032 procedures using dye chromoendoscopy, 366 using virtual chromoendoscopy, and 1275 using high-definition white-light endoscopy.
The overall neoplasia detection rate was 11.4%, “which is very similar to what has previously been seen in the literature,” Radia said.
However, the detection rate varied significantly by procedure: 19% in virtual chromoendoscopy, 12% in dye chromoendoscopy, and 9% in white-light endoscopy (P < .001). After accounting for a range of potential confounding factors, virtual chromoendoscopy still had the highest neoplasia detection rate.
Dye chromoendoscopy had a “prolonged withdrawal time and increased need for targeted biopsies without improving their neoplasia yield, which goes against our aspirations of sustainability,” Radia noted.
“It was interesting to see that the procedures with the most dye chromoendoscopy seem to have the longest withdrawal time, and those with the most white-light endoscopy seem to have the shortest,” she said. The difference remained significant even after controlling for procedures with polypectomy, “which has a significantly longer withdrawal time compared to procedures without.”
Results Varied by Center
There was wide variability between the five centers on several findings. The neoplasia detection rate ranged from 7.4% to 17.2%, depending on the center.
The surveillance method also varied. One center, for example, used white-light endoscopy in 82% of cases and dye chromoendoscopy in the other 18%. At another center, 61% of patients had dye chromoendoscopy, 36% white-light endoscopy, and 3% virtual chromoendoscopy. In a third center, 48% had virtual chromoendoscopy, 46% white-light endoscopy, and 6% dye chromoendoscopy.
The centers had varying proportions of patients with each of the three conditions, with ulcerative colitis ranging from 46% to 63%, Crohn’s disease from 9% to 39%, and PSC from 14% to 45%.
The heterogeneity of patients between the modality groups is one of the study’s limitations, Radia said. Others are the shorter withdrawal time with white-light endoscopy and the lack of standardized withdrawal time for the procedures.
The research team’s analyses are ongoing and include examination of the types of neoplasia detected, as well as accounting for endoscopist experience and patients who underwent two procedures with different modalities, Radia said.
Reflection of ‘Real-Life Practice’
Because the study was a retrospective analysis, it contains inherent biases and other issues, Raf Bisschops, MD, PhD, director of endoscopy, University of Leuven, Belgium, who co-chaired the session, said in an interview.
However, it was a “thorough analysis” that reflects “real-life practice,” he said. As such, it lends “huge support” to virtual chromoendoscopy, which “actually goes against the new [British Society of Gastroenterology] guideline that is about to come out.” The society plans to recommend in favor of dye chromoendoscopy, but the new study findings could be still incorporated into the upcoming guidelines so as to also endorse virtual chromoendoscopy.
Whatever the modality used, clinicians need to make sure they “pay attention” when looking for small neoplastic lesions, and “anything that can help you do that, that draws your attention to cell lesions ... can be helpful,” Bisschops said.
Performing targeted biopsies, as with dye chromoendoscopy, can be problematic, as “people don’t pay attention anymore to those cell lesions; they just focus on taking the 32 biopsies, which is a huge endeavor and it’s a pain to do it,” he added.
Radia has received a Research Training Fellowship Award from the UK patient organization PSC Support. No other funding was declared. Radia declared relationships with Abbvie, Galapogos, and Dr. Falk Pharma.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM ECCO 2025
Surgical vs Endoscopic Excision of Large Colon Polyps
Dear colleagues,
We now have the ability to remove almost any large colon polyp endoscopically using a variety of techniques — from the widely used endoscopic mucosal resection to the increasingly prevalent endoscopic submucosal dissection. Yet, in this new era,
In this issue of Perspectives, Dr. Jeffrey Mosko and Dr. Moamen Gabr discuss the importance of careful polyp selection and argue that almost all polyps can be safely removed endoscopically, with low recurrence rates. In contrast, Dr. Ira Leeds from colorectal surgery offers a counterpoint, urging caution when managing polyps in the cecum and rectum while highlighting the role of minimally invasive surgical approaches. We hope these discussions provide valuable insights to support your approach to managing large colorectal polyps, especially in an era of increasing colon cancer screening.
We also welcome your thoughts on this topic — join the conversation on X at @AGA_GIHN.
Gyanprakash A. Ketwaroo, MD, MSc, is associate professor of medicine, Yale University, New Haven, and chief of endoscopy at West Haven VA Medical Center, both in Connecticut. He is an associate editor for GI & Hepatology News.
Advantages of Endoscopic Resection for Large Colon Polyps
BY MOAMEN GABR, MD, MSC, AND JEFFREY D. MOSKO MD, MSC
General Advantages
Endoscopy has revolutionized the management of large colorectal polyps, offering a minimally invasive alternative to surgical resection. The dawn of endoscopic resection in the late 20th century, particularly the evolution of endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR) in Japan, marked a paradigm shift in the treatment of colonic lesions by enabling the removal of lesions that would otherwise necessitate surgery.
Endoscopic resection of colorectal polyps is generally performed in an outpatient setting, allowing patients to recover at home the same day. This not only minimizes disruption to daily life but also significantly enhances patient satisfaction.
Most procedures are performed under moderate or deep sedation eliminating the need for general anesthesia. This represents a critical benefit, particularly for older or medically frail patients who are at higher risk of anesthesia-related complications.
From an economic perspective, endoscopic resection reduces healthcare costs by eliminating prolonged hospital stays and complex perioperative care. Additionally, preserving the colon’s structure and function avoids long-term consequences such as altered bowel habits or ostomy dependence, common with surgical interventions.
The advantages of endoscopic intervention are clear: safety, cost-effectiveness, organ preservation, and convenience for patients.
Lesion Selection
The superiority of endoscopic resection relies on selecting lesions appropriately, specifically those with a low risk of lymph node metastases. This meticulous process should include assessing a lesion’s size, location, morphology, granularity, microvascular and surface pit pattern using a combination of high-definition white light endoscopy, virtual chromoendoscopy and image magnification (when available).
Gross morphologic assessment utilizes the Paris and LST classifications. Combining the Paris classification, lesion granularity and location is both straightforward and revealing. Ulcerated/excavated lesions (0-III) are concerning for deep invasion. Depressed (0-IIc) morphologies are strongly associated with T1 CRC. Nodular lesions (0-Is or IIa + Is) have a higher risk of T1 colorectal cancer (CRC), compared with flat lesions (0-IIa or 0-IIb). Non-granular lesions (0-Is and 0-IIa + Is) have a higher risk of covert cancer. Finally, the rectosigmoid location is associated with an increased risk of T1 CRC (vs. proximal locations).
Endoscopic surface pattern assessment increases one’s diagnostic accuracy. There are three primary endoscopic surface pattern classifications: NBI International Colorectal Endoscopic (NICE), Japanese NBI expert team (JNET), and Kudo pit pattern classifications. Colonic lesions that have a NICE Type 3, JNET 3, or Kudo type Vn pattern should be referred promptly for surgical resection. Lesions with a JNET 2B or Kudo type VI carry a higher risk of superficial T1 CRC but can still be removed endoscopically (see below) in expert centers. All other lesions should undergo endoscopic resection.
Endoscopic Resection Techniques
Endoscopic resection of large colorectal polyps encompasses two primary techniques: EMR and endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD), each tailored to specific lesion characteristics and operator expertise.
EMR, the technique of choice for the vast majority of lesions, relies on injecting a submucosal cushion to lift the lesion before excision. Recent advances, including enhanced snare designs and underwater EMR, have improved en-bloc resection rates, significantly reducing recurrence and enhancing the efficacy of this technique.
ESD offers unparalleled precision for en-bloc resection of complex lesions, particularly those with fibrosis or high-risk features. Cutting-edge innovations, such as traction devices, have streamlined the procedure, addressing the traditional challenges of ESD. Despite being more time intensive, ESD minimizes recurrence and provides complete histopathological evaluation, critical for the management of malignant or pre-malignant lesions.
For non-lifting polyps, newer techniques such as endoscopic full-thickness resection (eFTR), using tools like the Full-Thickness Resection Device (FTRD), enable resection of up to 2-3 cm of the colonic or rectal wall. This ensures complete removal of any lesion and its underlying tissue, effectively preventing recurrence.
These advancements demonstrate how endoscopy can tackle even the most challenging colorectal polyps, reinforcing its position as the preferred treatment modality.
Perceived Limitations
With ongoing refinement over the last 2 decades, many of the perceived limitations (below) of endoscopic resection have now been overcome.
- Difficult locations/access: Historically lesions at the anorectal junction, ileocecal valve, appendiceal orifice and anastomoses were preferentially sent for surgery. In spite of unique technical challenges at each of these locations, there is now compelling data supporting EMR for these scenarios. We now also have techniques aimed at enabling the resection of lesions with poor access including patient repositioning, distal attachments, variable endoscope diameter/flexibility, traction and overtube devices.
- Recurrence: In the past, recurrence after endoscopic resection of lesions > 20 mm has been reported to be as high as 20%. With our current systematic approach to complete resection, meticulous examination of the post-resection defect for residual polyp tissue, adjunctive techniques to address submucosal fibrosis (hot avulsion, CAST, submucosal release) and thermal ablation to the resection margin (EMR-T), the risk of recurrence for piecemeal resections can be decreased to < 5%. In fact, some groups argue for the en-bloc resection of all large colorectal lesions based on the extremely low (< 1%) recurrence rates and potential for decreased follow-up.
- Post-resection bleeding: Post-resection bleeding is no longer a major limitation of any endoscopic approach because of the combination of improved intra-procedural hemostatic and resection techniques, optimized electrosurgical technology, and enhanced defect closure capabilities and devices (with prophylactic defect closure now supported by randomized control trial level data).
- Perforation: Deep mural injury, once an endoscopists’ worst fear during resection, is no longer a surgical emergency. It can now be predicted, identified (Sydney classification) and successfully managed. In spite of more widespread aggressive resection strategies, the risk of emergency surgery in patients undergoing EMR and even ESD (where the risk of DMI is significantly higher) is extremely low.
Endoscopic resection for large colorectal polyps is effective, available, minimally invasive and organ sparing making it the standard of care for the management of colonic polyps. With ongoing iteration in techniques, more invasive surgical approaches can be avoided in almost all patients with benign and low-risk T1 colorectal cancers.
Dr. Gabr is associate GI division director at the University of Cincinnati, Ohio. Dr. Mosko is based in the division of gastroenterology at St. Michael’s Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
Blurred Lines: Polyp Needing Surgical versus Endoscopic Excision
BY IRA LEEDS, MD
I am grateful for the invitation to join in discussion with Dr. Gabr and Dr. Mosko on the ever-increasing role of endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR) and endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD). However, as a surgeon, I do carry at least mild trepidation entering one of the literary “safe spaces” of my gastroenterology colleagues.
With the increasing evidentiary support of EMR approaches and the increasing experience of those performing ESD, these two techniques are quickly becoming the options of choice. As these practices become ubiquitous, it is important to recognize both their advantages and limitations, compared with available surgical options. The decision to proceed with EMR and ESD is essentially a turning point away from early surgical referral for a complex lesion. In this discussion, I intend to highlight when EMR and ESD have a clear advantage to early surgical referral, why I believe that early surgical referral is still superior to advanced endoscopic techniques in the rectum, and why the approach for right-sided lesions should hinge on careful shared decision-making.
Endoscopic approaches nearly always beat surgical approaches when considering short-term risks. Even in the best surgical series, colorectal surgery typically leads to complications in 10%-15% of patients, 1%-5% being serious. Moreover, transabdominal surgical interventions (ie, colectomy) require considerable recovery involving at least a few days in the inpatient setting and over a month of activity restrictions. Finally, there is a minority of chronically unwell patients who cannot tolerate surgical intervention but may be fortunate enough to have a lesion that with enhanced attention can be endoscopically resectioned. While EMR and ESD also contribute a disproportionate burden of complications to endoscopy practice, overall complication rates are still favorable when compared with surgical resection.
Moreover, the most feared short-term complication of EMR and ESD, perforation, has the added benefit of a “controlled failure” to colectomy. Advanced endoscopic approaches already require a prepared colon, and patients are given strict return instructions. Hence, the yearly handful of postprocedural perforations that I get called upon to assist with typically tolerate a routine surgical exploration, repair or resection, and recover at rates equal to or better than elective colon resections. For these reasons, lesions that can be endoscopically removed within appropriate risk tolerances, can and should be considered for EMR or ESD at time of diagnosis.
There are two clinical scenarios where this consideration for up-front EMR or ESD requires further caution. First, any rectal lesion considered for advanced endoscopic techniques really needs to be done in multidisciplinary conference with a colorectal surgeon. In the modern era of colorectal surgery, surgeons now have numerous approaches to reach the rectum that bridge the gap between traditional endoscopy and transabdominal resection. For many rectal lesions, transanal laparoscopic and robotic approaches offer the opportunity for local excision. The most commonly practiced approach, transanal minimally invasive microsurgery (TAMIS), provides many of the benefits of endoscopy (eg, same-day discharge, no activity restrictions, limited periprocedural physiologic stress, low complication rates) while providing the surgical precision, repair strategies, and specimen orientation of conventional surgery. Anecdotally, the time it takes to do a high-quality TAMIS excision in the rectum can be substantially less than that required for a comparable ESD.
For rectal lesions in particular, specimen quality is paramount for oncologic prognosis. Regardless of any intrinsic favorable histopathology or deft hand of the endoscopist, a TAMIS approach will typically provide for a deeper partial thickness or even full thickness excision. More times each year than I would like, I find myself at a multidisciplinary tumor board discussing an endoscopically removed rectal lesion done in a piecemeal fashion or insufficient deep ESD where appropriate risk stratification is impossible and we end up offering patients a likely overly aggressive proctectomy or a potentially oncologically unsound re-excision. Consideration of EMR/ESD vs TAMIS up front would allow better sorting of which technique is most suited to which lesion and avoid these diagnostic dilemmas that only seem to be more common as EMR and ESD practices proliferate.
For a different set of reasons, an advanced cecal adenoma may also be more suited to upfront surgical considerations. Right colon lesions can be more challenging for surveillance for a host of reasons. Procedurally, right colon lesions are undeniably more difficult. The thin-walled cecum can be unforgiving for repeated polypectomies. Despite it being an uncomfortable subject for colonoscopists, the evidence suggests that getting to the cecum is not consistent or 100% expected. Finally, patients can be unwilling to undergo serial bowel preparation and endoscopic examination. In contrast, a laparoscopic right colectomy avoids these issues while also attributing little additional risk. Laparoscopic right-colon operations have overall complication rates of less than 10% and major complications of less than 1%. Hospital stays for laparoscopic right colectomy are typically 3 days or less. Finally, surgery reduces both the frequency of surveillance, and a shortened colon makes surveillance easier.
Advanced polypectomy techniques broaden our ability to address even difficult lesions under the ideally aligned degree of invasive procedure. However, like any procedure, these techniques have their own advantages and limitations. There will always be a minority of premalignant colon lesions that are best suited to surgery-first approaches to treatment. In my practice, maintaining open lines of communication and regular interaction with my endoscopy colleagues naturally leads to polyps being addressed in their most suitable fashion.
Dr. Leeds is assistant professor of surgery at the Yale School of Medicine and a staff surgeon at the VA Connecticut Healthcare System. He declares no conflicts of interest.
Dear colleagues,
We now have the ability to remove almost any large colon polyp endoscopically using a variety of techniques — from the widely used endoscopic mucosal resection to the increasingly prevalent endoscopic submucosal dissection. Yet, in this new era,
In this issue of Perspectives, Dr. Jeffrey Mosko and Dr. Moamen Gabr discuss the importance of careful polyp selection and argue that almost all polyps can be safely removed endoscopically, with low recurrence rates. In contrast, Dr. Ira Leeds from colorectal surgery offers a counterpoint, urging caution when managing polyps in the cecum and rectum while highlighting the role of minimally invasive surgical approaches. We hope these discussions provide valuable insights to support your approach to managing large colorectal polyps, especially in an era of increasing colon cancer screening.
We also welcome your thoughts on this topic — join the conversation on X at @AGA_GIHN.
Gyanprakash A. Ketwaroo, MD, MSc, is associate professor of medicine, Yale University, New Haven, and chief of endoscopy at West Haven VA Medical Center, both in Connecticut. He is an associate editor for GI & Hepatology News.
Advantages of Endoscopic Resection for Large Colon Polyps
BY MOAMEN GABR, MD, MSC, AND JEFFREY D. MOSKO MD, MSC
General Advantages
Endoscopy has revolutionized the management of large colorectal polyps, offering a minimally invasive alternative to surgical resection. The dawn of endoscopic resection in the late 20th century, particularly the evolution of endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR) in Japan, marked a paradigm shift in the treatment of colonic lesions by enabling the removal of lesions that would otherwise necessitate surgery.
Endoscopic resection of colorectal polyps is generally performed in an outpatient setting, allowing patients to recover at home the same day. This not only minimizes disruption to daily life but also significantly enhances patient satisfaction.
Most procedures are performed under moderate or deep sedation eliminating the need for general anesthesia. This represents a critical benefit, particularly for older or medically frail patients who are at higher risk of anesthesia-related complications.
From an economic perspective, endoscopic resection reduces healthcare costs by eliminating prolonged hospital stays and complex perioperative care. Additionally, preserving the colon’s structure and function avoids long-term consequences such as altered bowel habits or ostomy dependence, common with surgical interventions.
The advantages of endoscopic intervention are clear: safety, cost-effectiveness, organ preservation, and convenience for patients.
Lesion Selection
The superiority of endoscopic resection relies on selecting lesions appropriately, specifically those with a low risk of lymph node metastases. This meticulous process should include assessing a lesion’s size, location, morphology, granularity, microvascular and surface pit pattern using a combination of high-definition white light endoscopy, virtual chromoendoscopy and image magnification (when available).
Gross morphologic assessment utilizes the Paris and LST classifications. Combining the Paris classification, lesion granularity and location is both straightforward and revealing. Ulcerated/excavated lesions (0-III) are concerning for deep invasion. Depressed (0-IIc) morphologies are strongly associated with T1 CRC. Nodular lesions (0-Is or IIa + Is) have a higher risk of T1 colorectal cancer (CRC), compared with flat lesions (0-IIa or 0-IIb). Non-granular lesions (0-Is and 0-IIa + Is) have a higher risk of covert cancer. Finally, the rectosigmoid location is associated with an increased risk of T1 CRC (vs. proximal locations).
Endoscopic surface pattern assessment increases one’s diagnostic accuracy. There are three primary endoscopic surface pattern classifications: NBI International Colorectal Endoscopic (NICE), Japanese NBI expert team (JNET), and Kudo pit pattern classifications. Colonic lesions that have a NICE Type 3, JNET 3, or Kudo type Vn pattern should be referred promptly for surgical resection. Lesions with a JNET 2B or Kudo type VI carry a higher risk of superficial T1 CRC but can still be removed endoscopically (see below) in expert centers. All other lesions should undergo endoscopic resection.
Endoscopic Resection Techniques
Endoscopic resection of large colorectal polyps encompasses two primary techniques: EMR and endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD), each tailored to specific lesion characteristics and operator expertise.
EMR, the technique of choice for the vast majority of lesions, relies on injecting a submucosal cushion to lift the lesion before excision. Recent advances, including enhanced snare designs and underwater EMR, have improved en-bloc resection rates, significantly reducing recurrence and enhancing the efficacy of this technique.
ESD offers unparalleled precision for en-bloc resection of complex lesions, particularly those with fibrosis or high-risk features. Cutting-edge innovations, such as traction devices, have streamlined the procedure, addressing the traditional challenges of ESD. Despite being more time intensive, ESD minimizes recurrence and provides complete histopathological evaluation, critical for the management of malignant or pre-malignant lesions.
For non-lifting polyps, newer techniques such as endoscopic full-thickness resection (eFTR), using tools like the Full-Thickness Resection Device (FTRD), enable resection of up to 2-3 cm of the colonic or rectal wall. This ensures complete removal of any lesion and its underlying tissue, effectively preventing recurrence.
These advancements demonstrate how endoscopy can tackle even the most challenging colorectal polyps, reinforcing its position as the preferred treatment modality.
Perceived Limitations
With ongoing refinement over the last 2 decades, many of the perceived limitations (below) of endoscopic resection have now been overcome.
- Difficult locations/access: Historically lesions at the anorectal junction, ileocecal valve, appendiceal orifice and anastomoses were preferentially sent for surgery. In spite of unique technical challenges at each of these locations, there is now compelling data supporting EMR for these scenarios. We now also have techniques aimed at enabling the resection of lesions with poor access including patient repositioning, distal attachments, variable endoscope diameter/flexibility, traction and overtube devices.
- Recurrence: In the past, recurrence after endoscopic resection of lesions > 20 mm has been reported to be as high as 20%. With our current systematic approach to complete resection, meticulous examination of the post-resection defect for residual polyp tissue, adjunctive techniques to address submucosal fibrosis (hot avulsion, CAST, submucosal release) and thermal ablation to the resection margin (EMR-T), the risk of recurrence for piecemeal resections can be decreased to < 5%. In fact, some groups argue for the en-bloc resection of all large colorectal lesions based on the extremely low (< 1%) recurrence rates and potential for decreased follow-up.
- Post-resection bleeding: Post-resection bleeding is no longer a major limitation of any endoscopic approach because of the combination of improved intra-procedural hemostatic and resection techniques, optimized electrosurgical technology, and enhanced defect closure capabilities and devices (with prophylactic defect closure now supported by randomized control trial level data).
- Perforation: Deep mural injury, once an endoscopists’ worst fear during resection, is no longer a surgical emergency. It can now be predicted, identified (Sydney classification) and successfully managed. In spite of more widespread aggressive resection strategies, the risk of emergency surgery in patients undergoing EMR and even ESD (where the risk of DMI is significantly higher) is extremely low.
Endoscopic resection for large colorectal polyps is effective, available, minimally invasive and organ sparing making it the standard of care for the management of colonic polyps. With ongoing iteration in techniques, more invasive surgical approaches can be avoided in almost all patients with benign and low-risk T1 colorectal cancers.
Dr. Gabr is associate GI division director at the University of Cincinnati, Ohio. Dr. Mosko is based in the division of gastroenterology at St. Michael’s Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
Blurred Lines: Polyp Needing Surgical versus Endoscopic Excision
BY IRA LEEDS, MD
I am grateful for the invitation to join in discussion with Dr. Gabr and Dr. Mosko on the ever-increasing role of endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR) and endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD). However, as a surgeon, I do carry at least mild trepidation entering one of the literary “safe spaces” of my gastroenterology colleagues.
With the increasing evidentiary support of EMR approaches and the increasing experience of those performing ESD, these two techniques are quickly becoming the options of choice. As these practices become ubiquitous, it is important to recognize both their advantages and limitations, compared with available surgical options. The decision to proceed with EMR and ESD is essentially a turning point away from early surgical referral for a complex lesion. In this discussion, I intend to highlight when EMR and ESD have a clear advantage to early surgical referral, why I believe that early surgical referral is still superior to advanced endoscopic techniques in the rectum, and why the approach for right-sided lesions should hinge on careful shared decision-making.
Endoscopic approaches nearly always beat surgical approaches when considering short-term risks. Even in the best surgical series, colorectal surgery typically leads to complications in 10%-15% of patients, 1%-5% being serious. Moreover, transabdominal surgical interventions (ie, colectomy) require considerable recovery involving at least a few days in the inpatient setting and over a month of activity restrictions. Finally, there is a minority of chronically unwell patients who cannot tolerate surgical intervention but may be fortunate enough to have a lesion that with enhanced attention can be endoscopically resectioned. While EMR and ESD also contribute a disproportionate burden of complications to endoscopy practice, overall complication rates are still favorable when compared with surgical resection.
Moreover, the most feared short-term complication of EMR and ESD, perforation, has the added benefit of a “controlled failure” to colectomy. Advanced endoscopic approaches already require a prepared colon, and patients are given strict return instructions. Hence, the yearly handful of postprocedural perforations that I get called upon to assist with typically tolerate a routine surgical exploration, repair or resection, and recover at rates equal to or better than elective colon resections. For these reasons, lesions that can be endoscopically removed within appropriate risk tolerances, can and should be considered for EMR or ESD at time of diagnosis.
There are two clinical scenarios where this consideration for up-front EMR or ESD requires further caution. First, any rectal lesion considered for advanced endoscopic techniques really needs to be done in multidisciplinary conference with a colorectal surgeon. In the modern era of colorectal surgery, surgeons now have numerous approaches to reach the rectum that bridge the gap between traditional endoscopy and transabdominal resection. For many rectal lesions, transanal laparoscopic and robotic approaches offer the opportunity for local excision. The most commonly practiced approach, transanal minimally invasive microsurgery (TAMIS), provides many of the benefits of endoscopy (eg, same-day discharge, no activity restrictions, limited periprocedural physiologic stress, low complication rates) while providing the surgical precision, repair strategies, and specimen orientation of conventional surgery. Anecdotally, the time it takes to do a high-quality TAMIS excision in the rectum can be substantially less than that required for a comparable ESD.
For rectal lesions in particular, specimen quality is paramount for oncologic prognosis. Regardless of any intrinsic favorable histopathology or deft hand of the endoscopist, a TAMIS approach will typically provide for a deeper partial thickness or even full thickness excision. More times each year than I would like, I find myself at a multidisciplinary tumor board discussing an endoscopically removed rectal lesion done in a piecemeal fashion or insufficient deep ESD where appropriate risk stratification is impossible and we end up offering patients a likely overly aggressive proctectomy or a potentially oncologically unsound re-excision. Consideration of EMR/ESD vs TAMIS up front would allow better sorting of which technique is most suited to which lesion and avoid these diagnostic dilemmas that only seem to be more common as EMR and ESD practices proliferate.
For a different set of reasons, an advanced cecal adenoma may also be more suited to upfront surgical considerations. Right colon lesions can be more challenging for surveillance for a host of reasons. Procedurally, right colon lesions are undeniably more difficult. The thin-walled cecum can be unforgiving for repeated polypectomies. Despite it being an uncomfortable subject for colonoscopists, the evidence suggests that getting to the cecum is not consistent or 100% expected. Finally, patients can be unwilling to undergo serial bowel preparation and endoscopic examination. In contrast, a laparoscopic right colectomy avoids these issues while also attributing little additional risk. Laparoscopic right-colon operations have overall complication rates of less than 10% and major complications of less than 1%. Hospital stays for laparoscopic right colectomy are typically 3 days or less. Finally, surgery reduces both the frequency of surveillance, and a shortened colon makes surveillance easier.
Advanced polypectomy techniques broaden our ability to address even difficult lesions under the ideally aligned degree of invasive procedure. However, like any procedure, these techniques have their own advantages and limitations. There will always be a minority of premalignant colon lesions that are best suited to surgery-first approaches to treatment. In my practice, maintaining open lines of communication and regular interaction with my endoscopy colleagues naturally leads to polyps being addressed in their most suitable fashion.
Dr. Leeds is assistant professor of surgery at the Yale School of Medicine and a staff surgeon at the VA Connecticut Healthcare System. He declares no conflicts of interest.
Dear colleagues,
We now have the ability to remove almost any large colon polyp endoscopically using a variety of techniques — from the widely used endoscopic mucosal resection to the increasingly prevalent endoscopic submucosal dissection. Yet, in this new era,
In this issue of Perspectives, Dr. Jeffrey Mosko and Dr. Moamen Gabr discuss the importance of careful polyp selection and argue that almost all polyps can be safely removed endoscopically, with low recurrence rates. In contrast, Dr. Ira Leeds from colorectal surgery offers a counterpoint, urging caution when managing polyps in the cecum and rectum while highlighting the role of minimally invasive surgical approaches. We hope these discussions provide valuable insights to support your approach to managing large colorectal polyps, especially in an era of increasing colon cancer screening.
We also welcome your thoughts on this topic — join the conversation on X at @AGA_GIHN.
Gyanprakash A. Ketwaroo, MD, MSc, is associate professor of medicine, Yale University, New Haven, and chief of endoscopy at West Haven VA Medical Center, both in Connecticut. He is an associate editor for GI & Hepatology News.
Advantages of Endoscopic Resection for Large Colon Polyps
BY MOAMEN GABR, MD, MSC, AND JEFFREY D. MOSKO MD, MSC
General Advantages
Endoscopy has revolutionized the management of large colorectal polyps, offering a minimally invasive alternative to surgical resection. The dawn of endoscopic resection in the late 20th century, particularly the evolution of endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR) in Japan, marked a paradigm shift in the treatment of colonic lesions by enabling the removal of lesions that would otherwise necessitate surgery.
Endoscopic resection of colorectal polyps is generally performed in an outpatient setting, allowing patients to recover at home the same day. This not only minimizes disruption to daily life but also significantly enhances patient satisfaction.
Most procedures are performed under moderate or deep sedation eliminating the need for general anesthesia. This represents a critical benefit, particularly for older or medically frail patients who are at higher risk of anesthesia-related complications.
From an economic perspective, endoscopic resection reduces healthcare costs by eliminating prolonged hospital stays and complex perioperative care. Additionally, preserving the colon’s structure and function avoids long-term consequences such as altered bowel habits or ostomy dependence, common with surgical interventions.
The advantages of endoscopic intervention are clear: safety, cost-effectiveness, organ preservation, and convenience for patients.
Lesion Selection
The superiority of endoscopic resection relies on selecting lesions appropriately, specifically those with a low risk of lymph node metastases. This meticulous process should include assessing a lesion’s size, location, morphology, granularity, microvascular and surface pit pattern using a combination of high-definition white light endoscopy, virtual chromoendoscopy and image magnification (when available).
Gross morphologic assessment utilizes the Paris and LST classifications. Combining the Paris classification, lesion granularity and location is both straightforward and revealing. Ulcerated/excavated lesions (0-III) are concerning for deep invasion. Depressed (0-IIc) morphologies are strongly associated with T1 CRC. Nodular lesions (0-Is or IIa + Is) have a higher risk of T1 colorectal cancer (CRC), compared with flat lesions (0-IIa or 0-IIb). Non-granular lesions (0-Is and 0-IIa + Is) have a higher risk of covert cancer. Finally, the rectosigmoid location is associated with an increased risk of T1 CRC (vs. proximal locations).
Endoscopic surface pattern assessment increases one’s diagnostic accuracy. There are three primary endoscopic surface pattern classifications: NBI International Colorectal Endoscopic (NICE), Japanese NBI expert team (JNET), and Kudo pit pattern classifications. Colonic lesions that have a NICE Type 3, JNET 3, or Kudo type Vn pattern should be referred promptly for surgical resection. Lesions with a JNET 2B or Kudo type VI carry a higher risk of superficial T1 CRC but can still be removed endoscopically (see below) in expert centers. All other lesions should undergo endoscopic resection.
Endoscopic Resection Techniques
Endoscopic resection of large colorectal polyps encompasses two primary techniques: EMR and endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD), each tailored to specific lesion characteristics and operator expertise.
EMR, the technique of choice for the vast majority of lesions, relies on injecting a submucosal cushion to lift the lesion before excision. Recent advances, including enhanced snare designs and underwater EMR, have improved en-bloc resection rates, significantly reducing recurrence and enhancing the efficacy of this technique.
ESD offers unparalleled precision for en-bloc resection of complex lesions, particularly those with fibrosis or high-risk features. Cutting-edge innovations, such as traction devices, have streamlined the procedure, addressing the traditional challenges of ESD. Despite being more time intensive, ESD minimizes recurrence and provides complete histopathological evaluation, critical for the management of malignant or pre-malignant lesions.
For non-lifting polyps, newer techniques such as endoscopic full-thickness resection (eFTR), using tools like the Full-Thickness Resection Device (FTRD), enable resection of up to 2-3 cm of the colonic or rectal wall. This ensures complete removal of any lesion and its underlying tissue, effectively preventing recurrence.
These advancements demonstrate how endoscopy can tackle even the most challenging colorectal polyps, reinforcing its position as the preferred treatment modality.
Perceived Limitations
With ongoing refinement over the last 2 decades, many of the perceived limitations (below) of endoscopic resection have now been overcome.
- Difficult locations/access: Historically lesions at the anorectal junction, ileocecal valve, appendiceal orifice and anastomoses were preferentially sent for surgery. In spite of unique technical challenges at each of these locations, there is now compelling data supporting EMR for these scenarios. We now also have techniques aimed at enabling the resection of lesions with poor access including patient repositioning, distal attachments, variable endoscope diameter/flexibility, traction and overtube devices.
- Recurrence: In the past, recurrence after endoscopic resection of lesions > 20 mm has been reported to be as high as 20%. With our current systematic approach to complete resection, meticulous examination of the post-resection defect for residual polyp tissue, adjunctive techniques to address submucosal fibrosis (hot avulsion, CAST, submucosal release) and thermal ablation to the resection margin (EMR-T), the risk of recurrence for piecemeal resections can be decreased to < 5%. In fact, some groups argue for the en-bloc resection of all large colorectal lesions based on the extremely low (< 1%) recurrence rates and potential for decreased follow-up.
- Post-resection bleeding: Post-resection bleeding is no longer a major limitation of any endoscopic approach because of the combination of improved intra-procedural hemostatic and resection techniques, optimized electrosurgical technology, and enhanced defect closure capabilities and devices (with prophylactic defect closure now supported by randomized control trial level data).
- Perforation: Deep mural injury, once an endoscopists’ worst fear during resection, is no longer a surgical emergency. It can now be predicted, identified (Sydney classification) and successfully managed. In spite of more widespread aggressive resection strategies, the risk of emergency surgery in patients undergoing EMR and even ESD (where the risk of DMI is significantly higher) is extremely low.
Endoscopic resection for large colorectal polyps is effective, available, minimally invasive and organ sparing making it the standard of care for the management of colonic polyps. With ongoing iteration in techniques, more invasive surgical approaches can be avoided in almost all patients with benign and low-risk T1 colorectal cancers.
Dr. Gabr is associate GI division director at the University of Cincinnati, Ohio. Dr. Mosko is based in the division of gastroenterology at St. Michael’s Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
Blurred Lines: Polyp Needing Surgical versus Endoscopic Excision
BY IRA LEEDS, MD
I am grateful for the invitation to join in discussion with Dr. Gabr and Dr. Mosko on the ever-increasing role of endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR) and endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD). However, as a surgeon, I do carry at least mild trepidation entering one of the literary “safe spaces” of my gastroenterology colleagues.
With the increasing evidentiary support of EMR approaches and the increasing experience of those performing ESD, these two techniques are quickly becoming the options of choice. As these practices become ubiquitous, it is important to recognize both their advantages and limitations, compared with available surgical options. The decision to proceed with EMR and ESD is essentially a turning point away from early surgical referral for a complex lesion. In this discussion, I intend to highlight when EMR and ESD have a clear advantage to early surgical referral, why I believe that early surgical referral is still superior to advanced endoscopic techniques in the rectum, and why the approach for right-sided lesions should hinge on careful shared decision-making.
Endoscopic approaches nearly always beat surgical approaches when considering short-term risks. Even in the best surgical series, colorectal surgery typically leads to complications in 10%-15% of patients, 1%-5% being serious. Moreover, transabdominal surgical interventions (ie, colectomy) require considerable recovery involving at least a few days in the inpatient setting and over a month of activity restrictions. Finally, there is a minority of chronically unwell patients who cannot tolerate surgical intervention but may be fortunate enough to have a lesion that with enhanced attention can be endoscopically resectioned. While EMR and ESD also contribute a disproportionate burden of complications to endoscopy practice, overall complication rates are still favorable when compared with surgical resection.
Moreover, the most feared short-term complication of EMR and ESD, perforation, has the added benefit of a “controlled failure” to colectomy. Advanced endoscopic approaches already require a prepared colon, and patients are given strict return instructions. Hence, the yearly handful of postprocedural perforations that I get called upon to assist with typically tolerate a routine surgical exploration, repair or resection, and recover at rates equal to or better than elective colon resections. For these reasons, lesions that can be endoscopically removed within appropriate risk tolerances, can and should be considered for EMR or ESD at time of diagnosis.
There are two clinical scenarios where this consideration for up-front EMR or ESD requires further caution. First, any rectal lesion considered for advanced endoscopic techniques really needs to be done in multidisciplinary conference with a colorectal surgeon. In the modern era of colorectal surgery, surgeons now have numerous approaches to reach the rectum that bridge the gap between traditional endoscopy and transabdominal resection. For many rectal lesions, transanal laparoscopic and robotic approaches offer the opportunity for local excision. The most commonly practiced approach, transanal minimally invasive microsurgery (TAMIS), provides many of the benefits of endoscopy (eg, same-day discharge, no activity restrictions, limited periprocedural physiologic stress, low complication rates) while providing the surgical precision, repair strategies, and specimen orientation of conventional surgery. Anecdotally, the time it takes to do a high-quality TAMIS excision in the rectum can be substantially less than that required for a comparable ESD.
For rectal lesions in particular, specimen quality is paramount for oncologic prognosis. Regardless of any intrinsic favorable histopathology or deft hand of the endoscopist, a TAMIS approach will typically provide for a deeper partial thickness or even full thickness excision. More times each year than I would like, I find myself at a multidisciplinary tumor board discussing an endoscopically removed rectal lesion done in a piecemeal fashion or insufficient deep ESD where appropriate risk stratification is impossible and we end up offering patients a likely overly aggressive proctectomy or a potentially oncologically unsound re-excision. Consideration of EMR/ESD vs TAMIS up front would allow better sorting of which technique is most suited to which lesion and avoid these diagnostic dilemmas that only seem to be more common as EMR and ESD practices proliferate.
For a different set of reasons, an advanced cecal adenoma may also be more suited to upfront surgical considerations. Right colon lesions can be more challenging for surveillance for a host of reasons. Procedurally, right colon lesions are undeniably more difficult. The thin-walled cecum can be unforgiving for repeated polypectomies. Despite it being an uncomfortable subject for colonoscopists, the evidence suggests that getting to the cecum is not consistent or 100% expected. Finally, patients can be unwilling to undergo serial bowel preparation and endoscopic examination. In contrast, a laparoscopic right colectomy avoids these issues while also attributing little additional risk. Laparoscopic right-colon operations have overall complication rates of less than 10% and major complications of less than 1%. Hospital stays for laparoscopic right colectomy are typically 3 days or less. Finally, surgery reduces both the frequency of surveillance, and a shortened colon makes surveillance easier.
Advanced polypectomy techniques broaden our ability to address even difficult lesions under the ideally aligned degree of invasive procedure. However, like any procedure, these techniques have their own advantages and limitations. There will always be a minority of premalignant colon lesions that are best suited to surgery-first approaches to treatment. In my practice, maintaining open lines of communication and regular interaction with my endoscopy colleagues naturally leads to polyps being addressed in their most suitable fashion.
Dr. Leeds is assistant professor of surgery at the Yale School of Medicine and a staff surgeon at the VA Connecticut Healthcare System. He declares no conflicts of interest.