An Asymptomatic Patient with Colonic Leiomyoma

Case Rep Gastroenterol. 2023 Sep 12;17(1):269-274. doi: 10.1159/000533550. eCollection 2023 Jan-Dec.

Abstract

Subepithelial lesions (SELs) originating from muscularis mucosae of the colon are very rare findings on endoscopy. Appropriate management of SELs involves making a correct diagnosis and estimating their malignant potential. In this case study, a 58-year-old Saudi man presented with a small, 8-mm sigmoid polyp during screening colonoscopy. The polyp was removed by hot snare polypectomy and sent to pathology laboratory. Report showed an unremarkable colonic mucosa and underlying well-circumscribed submucosal lesion composed of monotonous spindle cells. Immunohistochemical (IHC) analysis ruled out CD117-/DOG1-positive GIST and confirmed the lesion as leiomyomatous polyp. Colonic leiomyomas are usually benign and often asymptomatic and discovered during CRC screening procedures. Diagnosis is made on histology/IHC analysis since endoscopically they might be indistinguishable from other SELs. Conventional polypectomy is an appropriate treatment for small colonic leiomyoma and these benign lesions typically do not recur.

Keywords: Case study; Colonic leiomyoma; Colorectal cancer; Gastrointestinal stromal tumor; Hot snare polypectomy.

Publication types

  • Case Reports

Grants and funding

This article was written without any funding support in the form of grants.