Abstract: | The records of 1,040 patients with 1,440 villous and tubulovillous adenomas of the colon and rectum treated at the Cleveland Clinic over a 21 year period were reviewed. The incidence of invasive adenocarcinoma was higher in patients with multiple adenomas at the time of presentation, in patients with a family history of colorectal cancer, and in those with adenomas greater than 4 cm in diameter. Eighty percent of the adenocarcinomas were Dukes' A or B, 15 percent were Dukes' C, and 5 percent presented with distant metastases. Clinical impression on examination was more accurate than biopsy in assessing the presence of malignancy in these tumors. Recurrence after local treatment of both benign and malignant tumors was high. Recurrence was significantly related to the size of the adenoma (more common when the tumor was more than 4 cm in diameter), location (more common when it was located in the rectum), and the type of treatment. Only 4 percent of the patients had died from colorectal cancer at the time of follow-up. The overall 5 year actuarial survival rate was 85 percent. |