Abstract

Using autoradiography after 1 h of pulsed labeling with tritiated thymidine in endoscopic biopsy specimens from normal-appearing mucosa, cell proliferation was determined at six predetermined sites of the whole colon in patients with neoplastic disease of the large bowel and was compared with that of subjects without macroscopic colonic pathology. The labeling index (the percentage of cells incorporating [3H]thymidine) was 8.6 ± 0.5 (mean ± SEM) in 13 patients with colon carcinoma (p < 0.001 vs. 16 control patients whose labeling index was 4.9 ± 0.2) and 9.1 ± 0.4 in 11 patients with a large adenoma in the colon (p < 0.001 vs. controls). Twenty-one patients with one or more small adenomas (diameter < 1 cm) had a moderately increased cell proliferation compared with controls (labeling index 6.2 ± 0.3, p < 0.02 vs. controls). In patients with neoplastic disease an enlargement of the proliferative compartment was found, whereas 6 patients with Crohn's colitis had values for labeling index and a distribution of labeled cells along the crypt comparable to that of control subjects. An increased cell proliferation was found along the entire colon under each of the neoplastic conditions studied. These findings indicate that although neoplastic lesions develop in a limited area of the colon, the entire large bowel may be at risk for tumor growth.

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