Irritable
Bowel Syndrome Patients not more likely to
get Colon Cancer
Newswise — Patients with
irritable bowel syndrome are at no greater
risk of having polyps, colon cancer or
inflammatory bowel diseases than healthy
people undergoing colonoscopies, according
to new research published in the American
Journal of Gastroenterology.
“Patients and doctors get
nervous about the symptoms of irritable
bowel syndrome (IBS),” says William D. Chey,
M.D., professor of Internal Medicine at the
University of Michigan Medical School. “They
think the symptoms represent something more
sinister.”
“This study should
reassure doctors and patients that typical
IBS symptoms are not indicators of a more
serious disease,” he adds.
Chey was the lead author
on the study, the largest prospective
evaluation of the results of colonoscopies
in patients with irritable bowel syndrome.
IBS symptoms include
recurrent episodes of abdominal pain or
cramping in connection with altered bowel
habits. The condition affects 10 to 20
percent of the U.S. population and is more
common among women than men. Many of those
afflicted never seek treatment.
IBS patients often undergo
colonoscopies because physicians are
particularly concerned about missing
colorectal cancer or inflammatory bowel
diseases like ulcerative colitis or Crohn’s
disease, Chey says. Roughly a quarter of all
colonoscopies performed in the U.S. are for
IBS-related symptoms.
This research shows that
it is unnecessary to order colonoscopies for
IBS patients, unless they show other
alarming symptoms like unexplained weight
loss or anemia, bleeding from the GI tract,
or have a family history of colon cancer,
inflammatory bowel disease or celiac
disease, says Chey, who also is director of
U-M’s Gastrointestinal Physiology Laboratory
and the Michigan Bowel Control Program.
“Lay people and doctors
overuse colonoscopies, which are very
expensive procedures, in patients with
typical IBS symptoms and no alarm features.
Of course, patients over the age of 50 years
or who have alarm features should undergo
colonoscopy to screen for polyps and colon
cancer.” Chey says.
Chey’s research also
showed that a small percentage of IBS
patients older than 35 (2.5%) had an unusual
disease called microscopic colitis.
Microscopic colitis can masquerade as IBS in
patients with diarrhea and is important to
diagnose because it is treated differently
than IBS, he says.
March is colorectal cancer
awareness month. Not counting skin cancers,
colorectal cancer is the third most common
cancer found in men and women in this
country. The risk of a person having
colorectal cancer in their lifetime is about
1 in 19.
More information about
colorectal cancer can be found at
http://www.cancer.med.umich.edu/cancertreat/gastro/colon_info.shtml.
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