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Non-conventional dysplasia in inflammatory bowel disease is more frequently associated with advanced neoplasia and aneuploidy than conventional dysplasia.

Hannah LeePeter S RabinovitchAras N MattisGregory Y LauwersWon-Tak Choi
Published in: Histopathology (2020)
Non-conventional morphological patterns of dysplasia are not uncommon in IBD, detected in 33% of the patients. The higher frequencies of advanced neoplasia (HGD or CRC) and aneuploidy in non-conventional dysplasia, in particular CCD, hypermucinous and GCD variants, suggest that they may have a higher malignant potential than conventional dysplasia or sporadic tubular adenomas, and thus need complete removal and/or careful follow-up. Greater than 40% of non-conventional dysplasia presented as a flat/invisible lesion, suggesting that IBD patients may benefit from random biopsy sampling in addition to targeted biopsies. The majority of non-conventional subtypes appear to develop via the chromosomal instability pathway, whereas an alternative serrated pathway may be responsible for the development of at least a subset of SSL-like and TSA-like dysplasias.
Keyphrases
  • end stage renal disease
  • ejection fraction
  • chronic kidney disease
  • newly diagnosed
  • prognostic factors
  • high grade
  • gene expression
  • copy number
  • risk assessment
  • ultrasound guided
  • drug delivery