4.5 Review

Neoplasia and Precursor Lesions of the Female Genital Tract in IBD: Epidemiology, Role of Immunosuppressants, and Clinical Implications

Journal

INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASES
Volume 24, Issue 3, Pages 510-531

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/ibd/izx062

Keywords

Crohn's disease; ulcerative colitis; inflammatory bowel disease; immunosuppressive treatment; thiopurines; biologicals; gynecologic malignancies; breast cancer; cervical carcinoma; cervical dysplasia; vulvar carcinoma; vaginal carcinoma; endometrial carcinoma; ovarian cancer

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In this review the risk of breast, ovarian, and endometrial cancer and cervical and vulvovaginal (pre) malignant abnormalities in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) with or without immune suppressive treatment will be discussed. So far, this has not been studied thoroughly and large studies taking into account diverse potential confounding factors are lacking. IBD per se has not been associated with development of cervical cancer, yet patients with Crohn's disease who smoke, have a younger age at diagnosis or who use(d) thiopurines might be more at risk. Other immunosuppressive medication seems not to increase this risk, however, as evidence at this point is incomplete, physician awareness and prevention by lifestyle counseling, HPV vaccination and (intensified) screening are warranted. The risk for breast, endometrial, ovarian, and vulvovaginal cancer in IBD patients appears to be comparable to the background population, although for breast cancer this may even be decreasedin Crohn's disease specifically. Immunosuppressive medication in general does not seem to alter this risk. Earlier and more frequent screening for breast cancer than currently conducted in general nationwide screening programs is not recommended at this moment. Current literature suggests a much lower overall malignancy recurrence rate in IBD patients than has been observed previously. More importantly, immune suppressive medication does not appear to increase the recurrence risk. Robust epidemiologic data on female genital tract cancer are needed.

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