Cancer in chronic ulcerative colitis

Abstract
Saline colonic lavage in 74 patients with chronic ulcerative colitis was performed utilizing a commercially available dental irrigating unit through a polyethylene catheter in the biopsy channel of a colonoscope or through a sigmoidoscope via a lavage-aspirating double-lumen probe. Six patients were found with colonic carcinoma. Two diagnoses of malignancy were established by cytologic smears and cell block alone. Two patients had positive mucosal biopsies and cell block. One patient with a hepatic flexure carcinoma and a second patient with a malignancy proximal to a left colon stricture were missed by these techniques. Considering the established proclivity for carcinoma in these patients, it is felt that segmental lavage in areas of stricture, grossly distorted mucosa, or endoscopically inaccessible areas represents a valuable adjunct in the diagnosis of carcinoma in chronic ulcerative colitis.