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Clip Closure Does Not Reduce Risk of Bleeding After Resection of Large Serrated Polyps: Results From a Randomized Trial

Authors :
Seth D. Crockett
Mouen Khashab
Douglas K. Rex
Ian S. Grimm
Matthew T. Moyer
Amit Rastogi
Todd A. Mackenzie
Heiko Pohl
Firas H. Al-Kawas
Fadi Antaki
Harry R. Aslanian
Pooja A. Elias
B. Joseph Elmunzer
Jeffrey A. Gill
Stuart R. Gordon
Muhammad K. Hasan
Mouen A. Khashab
Ryan J. Law
John M. Levenick
Abraham Mathew
Oswaldo Ortiz
Maria Pellise
Douglas Pleskow
Daniel von Renteln
Omid Sanaei
Source :
Clinical gastroenterology and hepatology : the official clinical practice journal of the American Gastroenterological Association. 20(8)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Serrated polyps are important colorectal cancer precursors and are most commonly located in the proximal colon, where post-polypectomy bleeding rates are higher. There is limited clinical trial evidence to guide best practices for resection of large serrated polyps (LSPs).In a multicenter trial, patients with large (≥20 mm) non-pedunculated polyps undergoing endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR) were randomized to clipping of the resection base or no clipping. This analysis is stratified by histologic subtype of study polyp(s), categorized as serrated [sessile serrated lesions (SSLs) or hyperplastic polyps (HPs)] or adenomatous, comparing clip vs control groups. The primary outcome was severe post-procedure bleeding within 30 days of colonoscopy.A total of 179 participants with 199 LSPs (191 SSLs and 8 HPs) and 730 participants with 771 adenomatous polyps were included in the study. Overall, 5 patients with LSPs (2.8%) experienced post-procedure bleeding compared with 42 (5.8%) of those with adenomas. There was no difference in post-procedure bleeding rates between patients in the clip vs control group among those with LSPs (2.3% vs 3.3%, respectively, difference 1.0%; P = NS). However, among those with adenomatous polyps, clipping was associated with a lower risk of post-procedure bleeding (3.9% vs 7.6%, difference 3.7%; P = .03) and overall serious adverse events (5.5% vs 10.6%, difference 5.1%; P = .01).The post-procedure bleeding risk for LSPs removed via EMR is low, and there is no discernable benefit of prophylactic clipping of the resection base in this group. This study indicates that the benefit of endoscopic clipping following EMR may be specific for2 cm adenomatous polyps located in the proximal colon.gov, Number: NCT01936948.

Details

ISSN :
15427714 and 01936948
Volume :
20
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical gastroenterology and hepatology : the official clinical practice journal of the American Gastroenterological Association
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....830fbc0dae7e289541153dae386734f9