Educational Resource

Lower GI
Diseases

Du cancer colorectal et des maladies inflammatoires chroniques de l'intestin (MICI) aux maladies diverticulaires, au SII et aux polypes colorectaux — comprenez les causes, le diagnostic par coloscopie, la polypectomie et les options de traitement. Une ressource clinique et pour les patients d'Envaste Medical.

View as:

1.9M

New colorectal cancer cases / year

10M+

People living with IBD worldwide

30%

Adults over 60 with diverticular disease

90%

5-year survival if colorectal cancer caught early

Les maladies gastro-intestinales inférieures touchent le côlon, le rectum et l'anus — un spectre allant des troubles fonctionnels (le SII affecte ~10–15 % de la population mondiale) aux malignités potentiellement mortelles (le cancer colorectal est le 3e cancer le plus fréquent dans le monde, avec 1,9 million de nouveaux cas par an). La coloscopie est la pierre angulaire du diagnostic et du traitement des maladies du GI inférieur — permettant la visualisation directe, la biopsie, l'ablation des polypes (polypectomie, EMR, ESD) et les interventions thérapeutiques incluant la dilatation par ballonnet pour les sténoses de la maladie de Crohn. Ce guide couvre les principales maladies du GI inférieur, les procédures colonoscopiques et les stratégies de prise en charge conformes aux recommandations BSG, ESGE et ECCO.

Overview of Lower GI Diseases

The lower gastrointestinal tract comprises the small intestine (jejunum and ileum), the large intestine (colon), the rectum, and the anus. Diseases affecting this region range from common functional disorders like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) to serious conditions including colorectal cancer, inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and diverticular disease.

Colonoscopy — a flexible camera examination of the entire colon — is the gold-standard diagnostic and therapeutic tool for lower GI disease. It allows direct visualisation of the colonic mucosa, biopsy of suspicious lesions, and removal of polyps before they become cancerous.

When to see a doctor

Rectal bleeding, persistent change in bowel habits, unexplained weight loss, abdominal pain lasting more than a few weeks, or anaemia without obvious cause should all prompt prompt medical evaluation.

Clinical Reference

Lower GI pathology encompasses neoplastic, inflammatory, functional, vascular, and structural disease. Risk stratification tools — including the FIT (faecal immunochemical test), NICE DG30 guidelines, and Manchester scoring — guide appropriate investigation pathways. Colonoscopy remains the definitive tool; however, CT colonography (virtual colonoscopy) is an accepted alternative in patients unfit for or declining optical colonoscopy. Capsule colonoscopy and AI-assisted adenoma detection are emerging adjuncts.

Condition Category Key Investigation Colonoscopy Role
Colorectal CancerNeoplasticColonoscopy + biopsy, CT staging, CEADiagnosis, tattooing, palliative stenting
Colorectal PolypsPre-neoplasticColonoscopyPolypectomy (snare, EMR, ESD)
Crohn's DiseaseInflammatory (IBD)Colonoscopy + ileoscopy, MRE, CRP, calprotectinDiagnosis, surveillance, stricture dilation
Ulcerative ColitisInflammatory (IBD)Colonoscopy + biopsy, calprotectin, CRPDiagnosis, dysplasia surveillance
Diverticular DiseaseStructuralCT abdomen, colonoscopy (elective)Diagnosis, haemostasis for bleeding
IBSFunctionalClinical (Rome IV criteria); exclusion of organic diseaseExclusion of IBD / malignancy

Anatomy of the Lower GI Tract

Small Intestine Caecum Appendix Ascending Transverse Colon Descending Sigmoid Rectum Anus

Small Intestine

6–7 metres long; divided into duodenum, jejunum, and ileum. Primary site of nutrient absorption. Crohn's disease frequently affects the terminal ileum.

Colon (Large Intestine)

~1.5 metres long; divided into ascending, transverse, descending, and sigmoid segments. Absorbs water and electrolytes; forms and stores faeces. Most colorectal cancers arise here.

Rectum

The final 15 cm of the large bowel before the anus. Stores faeces before defecation. Rectal cancer has distinct treatment pathways from colon cancer, including neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy.

Caecum & Appendix

The caecum is the junction between small and large intestine. The appendix is a small pouch arising from the caecum; appendicitis is one of the most common surgical emergencies.

Clinical Note — Colonoscopic Landmarks

Complete colonoscopy is defined by caecal intubation, confirmed by visualisation of the appendiceal orifice and ileocaecal valve, ideally supplemented by photodocumentation. The hepatic and splenic flexures are technically demanding; right-sided colon (ascending + caecum) harbours a disproportionate share of interval cancers — often flat or sessile serrated lesions missed on inadequate withdrawal. Withdrawal time ≥6 minutes is strongly correlated with adenoma detection rate (ADR). The ADR benchmark is ≥25% (≥20% in women, ≥30% in men) per BSG / ESGE quality standards.

Colorectal Cancer (CRC)

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is cancer of the colon or rectum. It is the third most common cancer worldwide and the second leading cause of cancer-related death. The good news is that it is one of the most preventable and treatable cancers when caught early — which is why screening programmes are so important.

Most colorectal cancers develop slowly over many years from benign growths called polyps. Regular colonoscopy screening allows these polyps to be detected and removed before they become cancerous — effectively preventing the disease from developing.

CRC staging follows the TNM system (UICC/AJCC 8th edition) and is complemented by the Dukes classification. MSI (microsatellite instability) and KRAS/NRAS/BRAF mutational status are mandatory for metastatic CRC to guide immunotherapy and anti-EGFR therapy eligibility. Lynch syndrome (hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer) accounts for 3–5% of all CRC; universal MMR/MSI testing of all CRC specimens is recommended by ESGE and BSG.

Warning Signs

Symptoms to Watch For

  • Rectal bleeding or blood in stool
  • Persistent change in bowel habits (>3 weeks)
  • Unexplained weight loss
  • Abdominal pain or bloating
  • Feeling of incomplete bowel emptying
  • Iron-deficiency anaemia (fatigue, pallor)

Key Risk Factors

  • Age over 50
  • Family history of CRC or polyps
  • Personal history of polyps or IBD
  • Hereditary syndromes (Lynch, FAP)
  • High-red-meat / processed-meat diet
  • Obesity, physical inactivity, smoking, alcohol
TNM Stage Dukes Description 5-yr Survival
IAConfined to bowel wall (submucosa or muscularis propria)~90%
IIBThrough bowel wall, no node involvement~75%
IIICRegional lymph node involvement~50%
IVDDistant metastases (liver, lung, peritoneum)~14%

Colorectal Polyps

Colorectal polyps are small growths on the inner lining of the colon or rectum. Most are harmless, but certain types — particularly adenomatous polyps — can slowly become cancerous over 10–15 years if left untreated. Removing them during colonoscopy (polypectomy) is one of the most effective cancer-prevention strategies available.

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Tubular Adenoma

Most common; low-grade dysplasia; low cancer risk if small

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Villous Adenoma

Higher malignant potential; often sessile and larger

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Sessile Serrated Lesion

Flat, right-sided; responsible for many interval cancers; easily missed

Hyperplastic Polyp

Generally benign; no surveillance required if small and distal

Post-Polypectomy Surveillance — BSG 2020 Guidelines

Risk Category Finding Surveillance Interval
Low1–2 adenomas <10 mm, low-grade dysplasiaNo surveillance; return to population screening
Intermediate3–4 small adenomas, or 1–2 adenomas ≥10 mm3 years
High≥5 adenomas, or ≥1 adenoma ≥20 mm, or any HGD1 year
SerratedSSL ≥10 mm or with dysplasia; ≥3 SSLs3 years

Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD)

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a term for two chronic conditions that cause inflammation of the digestive tract: Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis (UC). IBD is a lifelong condition that follows a relapsing-remitting course. While there is currently no cure, effective treatments can control symptoms and achieve long-term remission.

Crohn's Disease

  • Can affect any part of the GI tract (mouth to anus)
  • Transmural inflammation; skip lesions; cobblestone appearance
  • Symptoms: diarrhoea, abdominal cramps, weight loss, fatigue
  • Complications: strictures, fistulae, abscesses, perianal disease
  • Endoscopic balloon dilation used for short fibrostenotic strictures

Ulcerative Colitis

  • Confined to the colon and rectum; always involves the rectum
  • Mucosal inflammation only; continuous involvement
  • Symptoms: bloody diarrhoea, urgency, tenesmus, cramping
  • Complications: toxic megacolon, fulminant colitis, dysplasia / CRC
  • CRC surveillance colonoscopy from 8–10 years after diagnosis

IBD Therapy Ladder & Biologics

Step Drugs Indication
1st line5-ASA (mesalazine) — UC; corticosteroids (induction)Mild-moderate UC; induction of remission
2nd lineAzathioprine, 6-MP, methotrexateSteroid-dependent / chronic active disease
3rd lineAnti-TNF (infliximab, adalimumab), vedolizumab, ustekinumab, JAK inhibitorsModerate-severe IBD refractory to immunomodulators
SurgeryColectomy (UC), resection / strictureplasty (Crohn's)Medically refractory disease, complications, dysplasia, CRC

Diverticular Disease

Diverticula are small pouches that bulge outward through weak spots in the colon wall. Having these pouches — diverticulosis — is very common and usually causes no problems. Diverticulitis occurs when one or more of the pouches becomes inflamed or infected, causing pain and other symptoms.

Diverticulosis

Presence of diverticula without inflammation. Affects >50% of people over 70. Often asymptomatic — discovered incidentally during colonoscopy.

Acute Diverticulitis

Inflammation / infection of diverticula. Left iliac fossa pain, fever, altered bowel habit. CT abdomen is the diagnostic standard. Treated with antibiotics ± surgery for complications.

Diverticular Bleeding

Most common cause of significant lower GI bleeding in the elderly. Usually painless, right-sided, and self-limiting. Colonoscopy + haemostasis (clip, thermal) for persistent bleeding.

Prevention & Management

High-fibre diet
Adequate hydration
Regular physical activity
Avoid red and processed meat
Maintain healthy weight
Avoid smoking

Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)

IBS is a common functional bowel disorder characterised by abdominal pain associated with altered bowel habits (diarrhoea, constipation, or both) in the absence of structural or biochemical abnormalities. It affects up to 10–15% of the global population and significantly impairs quality of life.

IBS is a diagnosis of exclusion — meaning other serious conditions must be ruled out first. Colonoscopy may be recommended to exclude IBD, microscopic colitis, or colorectal cancer, particularly in patients with alarm features (rectal bleeding, weight loss, age >45 at onset, family history of CRC).

IBS is diagnosed using Rome IV criteria: recurrent abdominal pain ≥1 day/week for the last 3 months, associated with ≥2 of: related to defecation; associated with change in stool frequency; associated with change in stool form. Subtypes: IBS-D (diarrhoea-predominant), IBS-C (constipation-predominant), IBS-M (mixed), IBS-U (unsubtyped). Investigation: FBC, CRP, tTG-IgA (coeliac serology), faecal calprotectin (<50 µg/g has high NPV for IBD). Colonoscopy indicated if FCP elevated or alarm features present.

Dietary Management

  • • Low-FODMAP diet (first-line dietary intervention)
  • • Regular meal timing; avoid large meals
  • • Reduce caffeine, alcohol, and carbonated drinks
  • • Soluble fibre for IBS-C; avoid insoluble fibre in IBS-D
  • • Probiotics: limited but emerging evidence

Pharmacological Options

  • • Antispasmodics (mebeverine, hyoscine) — abdominal cramps
  • • Loperamide — IBS-D symptom control
  • • Laxatives (macrogol) — IBS-C
  • • Low-dose tricyclic antidepressants — pain modulation
  • • Linaclotide / plecanatide — IBS-C (NICE-approved)

Coloscopie et diagnostic : polypectomie, EMR, ESD et dilatation par ballonnet

Colonoscopy is the most thorough way to examine the entire colon. A thin flexible tube with a camera and light is guided through the rectum and colon while the patient is under mild sedation. Polyps found during the procedure can often be removed immediately. The preparation involves bowel cleansing the day before with a laxative solution.

Optical Colonoscopy

Gold standard; diagnostic and therapeutic in the same session

CT Colonography

Non-invasive alternative; no biopsy capability; detects polyps ≥6 mm

FIT / Stool Testing

Non-invasive screening; positive result triggers colonoscopy referral

Endoscopic Resection Techniques

Technique Indication Key Points
Cold snare polypectomyPolyps <10 mm (especially <5 mm)No electrocautery; lower bleeding risk; preferred for SSLs
Hot snare polypectomyPedunculated polyps 10–20 mmElectrocautery; risk of delayed bleeding; clip prophylaxis for large stalks
EMR (Endoscopic Mucosal Resection)Sessile lesions 10–20 mmSubmucosal injection lifts lesion; piecemeal if large; surveillance at 3–6 months
ESD (Endoscopic Submucosal Dissection)>20 mm lesions requiring en-bloc resectionTechnically demanding; longer procedure; lower recurrence vs piecemeal EMR
Balloon DilationCrohn's strictures of the colon / ileocolonic anastomosisShort (<5 cm), fibrostenotic strictures; through-the-scope balloon; fluoroscopy optional

Clinical Insights & Current Guidelines

BSG / ESGE 2023–2024 Key Updates

  • • ESGE 2022 Quality Colonoscopy guideline: ADR ≥25% is a mandatory performance indicator; ADR <15% is a patient safety concern requiring retraining.
  • • Bowel preparation: split-dose or day-of preparation is superior to previous day-only; BSG 2022 endorses low-volume preparations (1L + ascorbic acid) as equivalent to 2L or 4L high-volume preparations.
  • • AI-assisted colonoscopy (CADe systems): ESGE recommends CADe systems as adjuncts to improve ADR, particularly for right-sided flat lesions. Not yet a substitute for technique.
  • • Lynch syndrome: universal MMR testing of all new CRC diagnoses now recommended (BSG/ACPGBI 2020); colonoscopic surveillance every 1–2 years from age 25.
  • • Crohn's stricture dilation: short (<5 cm), non-prestenotic, fibrostenotic ileocolonic strictures are suitable for through-the-scope balloon dilation; success rate ~85% at 12 months.

Balloon Dilation in Lower GI Disease

Endoscopic balloon dilation of colonic and ileocolonic strictures in Crohn's disease is a well-established technique that delays or avoids surgery in selected patients. The Amara 3-Stage Balloon Dilator provides progressive, controlled radial force across three sequential stages within a single catheter, reducing the need for multiple device exchanges and allowing the endoscopist to titrate dilation precisely. For anastomotic strictures post-colonic resection, stepwise dilation (typically 15→18→20 mm) minimises perforation risk. High-pressure balloons are required for fibrotic post-inflammatory strictures. Injection of long-acting corticosteroid (triamcinolone) at the stricture margin at time of dilation reduces recurrence in refractory cases.

Single-Use Endoscopes in Lower GI Endoscopy

The lower GI endoscopy landscape is seeing increasing adoption of single-use flexible sigmoidoscopes and colonoscopes, driven by infection control requirements (particularly post-COVID-19), reducing reprocessing burden, and improving access in outpatient and remote settings. Single-use devices eliminate the risk of transmission of prions, biofilm-forming organisms, and emerging pathogens (e.g. CRE) that have been linked to reusable endoscope channels despite high-level disinfection. Envaste's single-use scope portfolio supports this transition.

Questions fréquentes : Maladies du GI inférieur

Quels sont les signes d'alerte du cancer colorectal ?

Les signes d'alerte du cancer colorectal comprennent des saignements rectaux ou du sang dans les selles, un changement persistant des habitudes intestinales durant plus de 3 semaines, une perte de poids inexpliquée, des douleurs ou ballonnements abdominaux, une sensation d'évacuation incomplète et une anémie ferriprive. Ces symptômes nécessitent une évaluation médicale rapide. Le cancer colorectal est très traitable lorsqu'il est détecté précocement — avec des taux de survie à 5 ans supérieurs à 90 % au stade I.

Quelle est la différence entre la maladie de Crohn et la rectocolite hémorragique ?

Les deux sont des formes de MICI. La maladie de Crohn peut toucher n'importe quelle partie du tractus GI de la bouche à l'anus, provoque une inflammation transmurale (sur toute l'épaisseur), et peut impliquer des lésions en saut, des sténoses et des fistules. La rectocolite hémorragique est limitée au côlon et au rectum, provoque une inflammation muqueuse continue commençant toujours au niveau du rectum, et se manifeste par des diarrhées sanglantes, une urgence défécatoire et des ténesmes. La coloscopie avec biopsie est indispensable pour le diagnostic et la différenciation.

À quelle fréquence doit-on réaliser une coloscopie de dépistage du cancer ?

Pour les personnes à risque moyen, le dépistage par coloscopie est généralement recommandé à partir de 45–50 ans (selon les recommandations nationales). Si aucun polype n'est trouvé, la prochaine coloscopie est recommandée dans 10 ans. Les personnes avec des polypes adénomateux nécessitent une surveillance plus précoce (1–3 ans selon la taille et le nombre). Ceux avec des antécédents familiaux de cancer colorectal, le syndrome de Lynch, la PAF ou une MICI de longue date peuvent nécessiter un dépistage plus précoce et plus fréquent.

Qu'est-ce qu'une coloscopie et que se passe-t-il pendant la procédure ?

Une coloscopie utilise une fine caméra flexible (colonoscope) introduite par le rectum pour examiner l'ensemble du côlon. Elle est réalisée sous légère sédation. La veille, une préparation colique (solution laxative) est prise pour vider le côlon. Pendant la procédure, l'endoscopiste visualise la muqueuse colique, réalise des biopsies et retire immédiatement les polypes par polypectomie. La procédure dure 20–45 minutes. La coloscopie virtuelle (colonographie CT) est une alternative non invasive pour les patients ne pouvant pas subir une coloscopie optique.

La dilatation par ballonnet peut-elle traiter les sténoses dans la MICI sans chirurgie ?

Oui — la dilatation endoscopique par ballonnet est un traitement bien établi pour les sténoses iléocoliques et anastomotiques courtes (<5 cm), fibrosténotiques dans la maladie de Crohn. Un cathéter à ballonnet est passé à travers le colonoscope et gonflé pour élargir progressivement le segment rétréci. Les taux de succès atteignent environ 85 % à 12 mois. Il évite ou retarde la chirurgie chez les patients sélectionnés. Des ballonnets haute pression sont utilisés pour les sténoses fibrotiques, et l'injection de corticoïdes lors de la dilatation peut réduire les récidives dans les cas réfractaires.

Medical Disclaimer The information provided on this page is for educational purposes only and does not substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.