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Keyword
- adenoma detection rate1
- ADR1
- clinically significant serrated polyp1
- clinically significant serrated polyp detection rate1
- colorectal cancer1
- CRC1
- CSSDR1
- CSSP1
- hazard ratio1
- HP1
- HR1
- hyperplastic polyp1
- New Hampshire Colonoscopy Registry1
- NHCR1
- PCCRC1
- postcolonoscopy colorectal cancer1
- sessile serrated polyp1
- SSP1
- traditional serrated adenomas1
- TSA1
Graphical Abstracts
1 Results
- Original article Clinical endoscopy
Clinically significant serrated polyp detection rates and risk for postcolonoscopy colorectal cancer: data from the New Hampshire Colonoscopy Registry
Gastrointestinal EndoscopyVol. 96Issue 2p310–317Published online: March 8, 2022- Joseph C. Anderson
- William Hisey
- Todd A. Mackenzie
- Christina M. Robinson
- Amitabh Srivastava
- Reinier G.S. Meester
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 4Higher adenoma detection rates reduce the risk of postcolonoscopy colorectal cancer (PCCRC). Clinically significant serrated polyps (CSSPs; defined as any sessile serrated polyp, traditional serrated adenoma, large [≥1 cm] or proximal hyperplastic polyp >5 mm) also lead to PCCRC, but there are no data on associated CSSP detection rates (CSSDRs). We used data from the New Hampshire Colonoscopy Registry (NHCR) to investigate the association between PCCRC risk and endoscopist CSSDR.