Editorial
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2024.
World J Gastroenterol. Aug 21, 2024; 30(31): 3640-3653
Published online Aug 21, 2024. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v30.i31.3640
Table 1 Types of gastric polyps


Frequency
Risk factors
Associated conditions
Age/sex
Location
Size
Symptoms
Endoscopic features
Neoplastic potential
Good
Fundic glandSporadic80% Proton-pump inhibitorsNoneMiddle age/womenBody/fundus< 8 mmAsymptomaticSessile, smooth surfaceVery rare
SyndromicHereditaryFamilial adenomatous polyposis, MUTHYEarly age/no sex differenceBody, multiple (> 90%)< 6 mmAsymptomaticRare
Inflammatory fibroidRare (< 0.1%) Not known
May be familial, Devon polyposis syndrome-associated with PDGFRA mutationOlder (6th-7th decade) (adults/slight predominace in women)Antrum-pylorusMean size 1-5 cm, up to 9 cmEarly satiety or good, sometimes bleedingSessile, pedunculated, +/- ulcerated Very rare
Ectopic pancreas0.5%-13%NoneNoneNot reportedAntrum-prepyloric regionVariableIncidentalFirm round or oval subepithelial lesion with a central depressionBenign, no follow-up needed
Hamartomatous polyp Sporadic1%Not known-Not reportedAnywhereVariableIncidental findingsSessile, differential dx H. pyloriBenign
Bad
HamartomatousSyndromicPJS, Juvenile polyposis syndrome and phosphatase and tensin homolog hamartoma syndromeSTK11 (PJS)--The 0.1-3 cm (PJS)-Lifetime malignancy risk (up to 29%)
HamartomatousSolitaryGastric inverted Hamartomatous Polyps Common (up to 20%)
Hyperplastic15%H. pylori, chronic atrophic gastritis Not reported Middle age/no sex differenceAntrum (60%), any site, solitary, more common multipleUsually < 2 cm, but up to 12 cmAsymptomatic, incidental findingsSmooth or lobulated, sessile or pedunculatedDysplasia 15%, cancer risk < 1%
Adenoma6%-10%Atrophy, intestinal MetaplasiaNoneMiddle age/men (intestinal type)More common, antrum (intestinal type), any site (other types)Variable (few mm to cm)Asymptomatic, anemia, bleeding, rarely obstruction Sessile, pedunculated Depends on size; histology (high-grade dysplasia 30% at 5 years); likely gene-disrupting 3% at 5 years
Gastric neuroendocrine tumors< 2% gastric neoplasm
GNET type 180% all G-NETAutoimmune gastritisNoneMiddle age/oldBody, fundusSmall, multiple Asymptomatic anemiaReddish Low (< 1%), locoregional MTS depends on size, grading and mm propria invasion: 5 years survival 100%
GNET type 25%Gastrinoma (multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1)YoungBody, fundusSmall, multiple Diarrhea, abdominal pain
bleeding from peptic ulcer
Small, yellow, often multiple ulcerationLymph node MTS 30% with good prognosis
Ugly
GNET type 3The 10%-20% all GNETNo predisposing factorsNoneAdults/no sex differenceAnywhere, preference antrumLarge, solitaryAsymptomaticSingle lesionThe 50% risk MTS. Survival 70% at 5 years
Early gastric cancerSporadic hereditary
(1%-3%)
Equal to gastric adenomaE-cadherin gene NoneAdult/old/maleAntrum (50%) corpus (35%), cardia (15%)Epigastric pain glycemic index bleeding, anemia, vomiting/nauseaPolyp, ulcerThe 5 years survival 75%, the 80% lifetime cancer risk