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Combining aneuploidy and dysplasia for colitis' cancer risk assessment outperforms current surveillance efficiency: a meta-analysis.

Authors :
Meyer, Rüdiger
Freitag-Wolf, Sandra
Blindow, Silke
Büning, Jürgen
Habermann, Jens
Source :
International Journal of Colorectal Disease. Feb2017, Vol. 32 Issue 2, p171-182. 12p. 7 Charts.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Purpose: Cancer risk assessment for ulcerative colitis patients by evaluating histological changes through colonoscopy surveillance is still challenging. Thus, additional parameters of high prognostic impact for the development of colitis-associated carcinoma are necessary. This meta-analysis was conducted to clarify the value of aneuploidy as predictor for individual cancer risk compared with current surveillance parameters. Methods: A systematic web-based search identified studies published in English that addressed the relevance of the ploidy status for individual cancer risk during surveillance in comparison to neoplastic mucosal changes. The resulting data were included into a meta-analysis, and odds ratios (OR) were calculated for aneuploidy or dysplasia or aneuploidy plus dysplasia. Results: Twelve studies addressing the relevance of aneuploidy compared to dyplasia were comprehensively evaluated and further used for meta-analysis. The meta-analysis revealed that aneuploidy (OR 5.31 [95 % CI 2.03, 13.93]) is an equally effective parameter for cancer risk assessment in ulcerative colitis patients as dysplasia (OR 4.93 [1.61, 15.11]). Strikingly, the combined assessment of dysplasia and aneuploidy is superior compared to applying each parameter alone (OR 8.99 [3.08, 26.26]). Conclusions: This meta-analysis reveals that aneuploidy is an equally effective parameter for individual cancer risk assessment in ulcerative colitis as the detection of dysplasia. More important, the combined assessment of dysplasia and aneuploidy outperforms the use of each parameter alone. We suggest image cytometry for ploidy assessment to become an additional feature of consensus criteria to individually assess cancer risk in UC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01791958
Volume :
32
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Journal of Colorectal Disease
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
121037872
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00384-016-2684-5