3.8 Review

Post-polypectomy surveillance: the present and the future

Journal

CLINICAL ENDOSCOPY
Volume 55, Issue 4, Pages 489-495

Publisher

KOREAN SOC GASTROINTESTINAL ENDOSCOPY
DOI: 10.5946/ce.2022.097

Keywords

Colonoscopy; Colorectal cancer; Colorectal polyp; Polypectorny; Surveillance

Funding

  1. National Cancer Center Research and Development Fund [2021-A-18]

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An effective and safe post-polypectomy surveillance program should consider risk stratification based on baseline colonoscopy results. Major international guidelines have recommended and updated risk-stratified surveillance programs, with more individuals being classified as low-risk for less frequent or no surveillance. The new colonoscopy screening and surveillance guidelines in Japan also incorporate risk-stratified post-polypectomy surveillance.
An appropriate post-polypectomy surveillance program requires the effectiveness of reducing colorectal cancer and safety. In addition, the post-polypectomy surveillance program should consider the burden of limited medical resource capacity, cost-effectiveness, and patient adherence. In this sense, a risk-stratified surveillance program based on baseline colonoscopy results is ideal. Major international guidelines for post-polypectomy surveillance, such as those from the European Union and the United States, have recommended risk-stratified surveillance programs. Both guidelines have recently been updated to better differentiate between high- and low-risk individuals. In both updated guidelines, more individuals have been downgraded to lower-risk groups that require less frequent or no surveillance. Furthermore, increased attention has been paid to the surveillance of patients who undergo serrated polyp removal. Previous guidelines in Japan did not clearly outline the risk stratification in post-polypectomy surveillance. However, the new colonoscopy screening and surveillance guidelines presented by the Japan Gastroenterological Endoscopy Society include a risk-stratified post-polectomy surveillance program. Further discussion and analysis of unresolved issues in this field, such as the optimal follow-up after the first surveillance, the upper age limit for surveillance, and the ideal method for improving adherence to surveillance guidelines, are warranted.

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