Patients with Crohn’s disease are at increased risk of small bowel adenocarcinoma due to chronic inflammation, though absolute incidence is low and surveillance guidelines are unclear. We report a patient with long-standing small bowel Crohn’s disease and prior adenocarcinoma who developed high-grade dysplasia despite clinical, biochemical, and endoscopic remission on biologic therapy. An asymptomatic rise in fecal calprotectin prompted imaging and device-assisted enteroscopy, revealing a non-traversable stricture. Surgical resection confirmed high-grade dysplasia with negative margins. This case underscores persistent malignancy risk in fibrostenosing Crohn’s disease and the importance of biomarkers and advanced diagnostics in high-risk patients.
Mohiuddin et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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