Sunday Poster Session
Category: Colon
Rafi Iftekhar, MD (he/him/his)
Ballad Health - Richmond, VA UNITED STATES - Richmond, VA
Norton, VA
A 77-year-old male with normocytic anemia, metastatic prostate cancer, and hereditary hemochromatosis (C282Y homozygous) was referred for surveillance colonoscopy. His prior colonoscopy, six years earlier, showed a benign polyp and thrombosed hemorrhoids.
Current colonoscopy showed normal mucosa throughout the colon. A 1–3 mm sessile polyp in the cecum was removed with cold forceps, and a 3–6 mm sessile polyp in the transverse colon was removed via cold snare. In the rectum, a 15 mm semi-pedunculated polyp located just proximal to the dentate line was resected with hot snare. It appeared hypervascular but was nonbleeding. Histology revealed lobular clusters of capillaries lined by endothelial cells with granulation tissue and neutrophilic infiltrate, consistent with PG.
Rectal PG is extremely rare. Most GI PGs present with bleeding, but this lesion was asymptomatic and incidentally discovered. The hypervascular appearance may resemble adenomas or even malignancy, underscoring the need for histologic diagnosis.
This case is unique due to the patient’s homozygous HFE C282Y mutation. Iron overload from hemochromatosis may contribute to oxidative stress, tissue injury, and altered healing, potentially predisposing to abnormal vascular lesions such as PG. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of rectal PG in a patient with this genetic background.
This report highlights the importance of recognizing rare benign lesions during colonoscopy and considering systemic or genetic factors in mucosal pathology.