Noncolorectal Malignancies in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: More than Meets the Eye

被引:19
|
作者
Beaugerie, Laurent [1 ]
Sokol, Harry
Seksik, Philippe
机构
[1] Hop St Antoine, Serv Gastroenterol & Nutr, Dept Gastroenterol, FR-75571 Paris 12, France
关键词
Inflammatory bowel disease; Cancer risks; Small bowel adenocarcinoma; Lymphoma; Immunosuppressive therapy; POPULATION-BASED COHORT; PRIMARY SCLEROSING CHOLANGITIS; CAUSE-SPECIFIC MORTALITY; ABNORMAL PAP-SMEARS; T-CELL LYMPHOMA; CROHNS-DISEASE; RHEUMATOID-ARTHRITIS; INCREASED RISK; ULCERATIVE-COLITIS; LYMPHOPROLIFERATIVE DISORDERS;
D O I
10.1159/000228577
中图分类号
R57 [消化系及腹部疾病];
学科分类号
摘要
In patients with Crohn's disease, the risk of small bowel adenocarcinoma is 20-40 times higher than the low background risk of the general population. In the subset of patients with longstanding small bowel lesions, the absolute risk of small bowel adenocarcinoma exceeds 1 per 100 patient-years after 25 years of follow-up and becomes equivalent to the risk of colorectal cancer. Growing evidence suggests that the pathogenesis of small bowel adenocarcinoma arising in inflammatory lesions of Crohn's disease is similar to that of colorectal cancer complicating chronic colonic inflammation (inflammation-dysplasia-cancer sequence). However, contrasting with the established endoscopic detection of colonic advanced neoplasias in patients with longstanding extensive colitis, there is no consensus at this time how to face the excess-risk of small bowel adenocarcinoma in patients at high risk. There are no specific clinical or imaging alert signs and endoscopic surveillance of the totality of the inflamed small bowel mucosa would suppose to perform repeated enteroscopies, with the potential limiting factor of stenosis. Very preliminary data suggest that chemoprevention with salicylates could be an alternative way for reducing the risk. Data from referral centers and from the CESAME cohort suggest that intestinal lymphomas may arise in the chronically inflamed segments in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Regarding nonintestinal lymphomas, it is now established that IBD patients treated with thiopurines have an excess risk of lymphomas, exhibiting in most cases pathological features of lymphomas associated with immunosuppression, including the frequent presence of EBV in neoplastic tissues. There is growing evidence that treatment with thiopurines is responsible by itself for this excess risk. IBD patients receiving immunomodulators, especially young men, are also at risk (0.4 for 10,000 patient-years in the CESAME study) for developing fatal early post-mononucleosis lymphomas, like in Purtilo's syndrome, maybe in association with a background genetic susceptibility. Finally, patients receiving thiopurines and/or TNF-inhibitors are at risk for developing fatal hepatosplenic T cell lymphomas, but this risk is low ( no case in the CESAME study). Whether patients receiving a monotherapy with methotrexate and/or TNF inhibitors are at increased risk of lymphomas is not known. Concordant data suggest that women receiving immunosuppressive therapy are at increased risk for developing uterine cervix dysplasia and require closer surveillance. But it is not established whether the risk of uterine cervix cancer and basal and squamous cell skin cancers ( that may be associated with chronic human papillomavirus infection) is increased in patients receiving immunomodulators. Copyright (C) 2009 S. Karger AG, Basel
引用
收藏
页码:375 / 381
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Malignancies in inflammatory bowel disease
    Nieminen, Urpo
    Farkkila, Martti
    SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2015, 50 (01) : 81 - 89
  • [2] Overlapping irritable bowel syndrome and inflammatory bowel disease: less to this than meets the eye?
    Quigley, Eamonn M. M.
    THERAPEUTIC ADVANCES IN GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2016, 9 (02): : 199 - 212
  • [3] Malignancies in Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Single-Centre Experience
    Madanchi, Mehdi
    Zeitz, Jonas
    Barthel, Christiane
    Samaras, Panagiotis
    Scharl, Sylvie
    Sulz, Michael C.
    Biedermann, Luc
    Frei, Pascal
    Vavricka, Stephan R.
    Rogler, Gerhard
    Scharl, Michael
    DIGESTION, 2016, 94 (01) : 1 - 8
  • [4] Hematologic malignancies in the Japanese patients with inflammatory bowel disease
    Fukata, Norimasa
    Okazaki, Kazuichi
    Omiya, Mika
    Matsushita, Mitsunobu
    Watanabe, Mamoru
    JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2014, 49 (09) : 1299 - 1306
  • [5] Malignancies in Inflammatory Bowel Disease
    Greuter, Thomas
    Vavricka, Stephan
    Konig, Alexander O.
    Beaugerie, Laurent
    Scharl, Michael
    DIGESTION, 2020, 101 (SUPPL 1) : 136 - 145
  • [6] Malignancies in patients with inflammatory bowel disease: a nationwide register study in Finland
    Jussila, Airi
    Virta, Lauri J.
    Pukkala, Eero
    Farkkila, Martti A.
    SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2013, 48 (12) : 1405 - 1413
  • [7] More Than Meets the Eye
    Manno, Rebecca L.
    Levine, Stuart M.
    Gelber, Allan C.
    SEMINARS IN ARTHRITIS AND RHEUMATISM, 2011, 40 (04) : 324 - 329
  • [8] Thiopurines related malignancies in inflammatory bowel disease: Local experience in Granada, Spain
    Gomez-Garcia, Mari
    Jose Cabello-Tapia, Maria
    Damin Sanchez-Capilla, Antonio
    De Teresa-Galvan, Javier
    Redondo-Cerezo, Eduardo
    WORLD JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2013, 19 (30) : 4877 - 4886
  • [9] Lymphoma and other lymphoproliferative disorders in inflammatory bowel disease: A review
    Subramaniam, Kavitha
    D'Rozario, James
    Pavli, Paul
    JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY, 2013, 28 (01) : 24 - 30
  • [10] The epidemiology of inflammatory bowel disease: East meets west
    Mak, Wing Yan
    Zhao, Mirabella
    Ng, Siew Chien
    Burisch, Johan
    JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY, 2020, 35 (03) : 380 - 389