Clinical, endoscopic, and pathologic characteristics of colorectal polyps in Indian children and adolescents

Objectives Colorectal polyps are among the common causes for rectal bleeding in children. We studied the clinical, colonoscopic, and histopathological features of colorectal polyps and polyposis syndrome in Indian children and adolescents. Methods Medical records of children and adolescents with col...

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Published inIndian journal of gastroenterology Vol. 34; no. 6; pp. 453 - 457
Main Authors Rathi, Chetan, Ingle, Meghraj, Pandav, Nilesh, Pipaliya, Nirav, Choksi, Dhaval, Sawant, Prabha
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New Delhi Springer India 01.11.2015
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Summary:Objectives Colorectal polyps are among the common causes for rectal bleeding in children. We studied the clinical, colonoscopic, and histopathological features of colorectal polyps and polyposis syndrome in Indian children and adolescents. Methods Medical records of children and adolescents with colorectal polyps and polyposis syndrome were retrospectively reviewed from 2001 to 2014 at Department of Gastroenterology, in large tertiary care center of Mumbai. Results A total of 120 patients were found to have colonic polyps during study period. Mean age of presentation in children was 7.31 ± 4.05 years (range 2 to 19 years), with male-to-female ratio of 2.16:1. Rectal bleeding was presenting symptom in 95.8 % with mean duration of 12.6 ± 15 months. Majority of polyps (77.5 %) were juvenile, and 97.2 % were located in left colon. Solitary polyps were seen in 76.6 %, multiple polyps in 11.6 %, juvenile polyposis syndrome in 6.6 %, familial adenomatous polyposis in 4.2 %, and Peutz-Jeghers syndrome in 0.8 % of the children. The polyposis syndrome group had higher age at presentation ( p  = 0.00006), greater likelihood of anemia, abdominal pain, and diarrhea ( p  = 0.0001, 0.0002, and 0.0051, respectively). Likelihood of adenomatous change in polyps was higher in polyposis syndrome group ( p  = 0.0003). Left colonic polyps were more common in non-polyposis group, whereas pan-colonic polyps were more common in polyposis syndrome group ( p  < 0.00001). Conclusion Presence of anemia, abdominal pain, diarrhea, higher age at presentation (more than 10 years), and history of polypectomy are clinical indicators of polyposis syndrome.
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ISSN:0254-8860
0975-0711
DOI:10.1007/s12664-015-0612-1