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Serrated polyposis syndrome with multiple inverted lesions in the colon: Case report and elucidation of morphogenetic mechanism.

Chihiro YoshikawaFumikazu KoyamaKohei MoritaHiroyuki KugeTakayuki NakamotoShinsaku ObaraYosuke IwasaTomohiro KunishigeChiho OhbayashiMasayuki Sho
Published in: DEN open (2021)
A 70-year-old man underwent surveillance colonoscopy following surgery for occlusive sigmoid colon cancer. The procedure revealed nine sessile serrated lesions (SSLs), including three inverted lesions. Endoscopic and surgical resections were performed. All nine lesions were confirmed pathologically as SSL, and the patient was diagnosed with serrated polyposis syndrome (SPS). Three inverted SSLs (iSSLs) showed endophytic growth without epithelial misplacement. Crypt analysis revealed that iSSL crypts were wider at the bottom than the opening, roughly resembling a frustoconical shape. Our results suggest that a horizontal arrangement of frustoconical crypts leads to hemispherical deformation of the muscularis mucosa, forming an inverted shape. This is the first report to reveal the morphogenesis of iSSLs from the shape of the crypt.
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