Abstract

In patients with colonic diverticulosis, the prevalence of segmental colitis associated with diverticulosis (SCAD) is debated. The aim of this study was to assess the prevalence of SCAD in consecutive patients with diverticulosis in a single tertiary center. Over a six-month period, consecutive adult patients with colonic diverticulosis were included. Patients with endoscopic signs of interdiverticular mucosal inflammation (erythema, friability, and ulcerations) were considered suspected SCAD and underwent multiple biopsy samplings to confirm diagnosis. Clinical features were collected from diverticulosis and suspected SCAD patients. In total, 367 (26.5%) of 1383 patients who underwent colonoscopy presented diverticulosis. Among diverticulosis patients, 4.3% (n = 16) presented macroscopic signs of interdiverticular mucosal inflammation and were identified as suspected SCAD. Compared to that of patients with diverticulosis, the age of suspected SCAD patients was significantly lower (60 ± 12.9 years (41.0–86.0) vs. 70 ± 10.6 years (38.0–93.0)) (p = 0.047). Among patients with suspected SCAD, one patient received a new diagnosis of Crohn’s disease, one had spirochetosis infection, and one presented drug-induced colitis. The remaining patients with suspected SCAD (n = 13) were not confirmed by histology. This observational study suggests that SCAD diagnosis is a challenge in clinical practice due to the heterogeneity of endoscopic findings and lack of stated histological criteria.

Highlights

  • Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutralDiverticulosis of the colon is common in Western countries, affecting 50–66% of individuals over 80 years of age [1]

  • A small but undefined subset of patients with diverticulosis may develop segmental colitis associated with diverticulosis (SCAD) [2]

  • Diverticulosis was present in 367 patients (26.5%)

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Summary

Introduction

Diverticulosis of the colon is common in Western countries, affecting 50–66% of individuals over 80 years of age [1]. Males are more affected than females, with a median age of presentation of 63.6 years The most common clinical manifestations are rectal bleeding, diarrhea, and abdominal pain. Nausea, fever, and biochemical alterations such as leucocytosis are very rare [4,5,6]. The majority of these patients showed a benign course with spontaneous resolution or responded to 5-aminosalicylates [7,8]

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