Teduglutide-Induced Polyps

J Salazar et al. JPGN Reports 4(4):p e389. Open Access! Gastric Foveolar Hyperplastic Polyps in 2 Children With Short Bowel Syndrome on Long-Term Teduglutide

I have not been an enthusiastic early adopter of teduglutide. Though it has been shown to reduce HAL volumes in those with short bowel syndrome (SBS), this tends to revert with cessation of treatment. In addition, it has a very high cost and long-term adverse effects are unclear. Currently the manufacturer recommends a colonoscopy after 1 year of treatment.

This case report by Salazar et al identified two children who developed foveolar hyperplastic gastric polyps after receiving teduglutide.

Discussion points:

  • “There have been increasing reports of both benign and malignant small bowel polyp development. In trials of pediatric patients, limited to 12 and 24 weeks, initial upper endoscopy and colonoscopies were not required. In addition, postexposure upper endoscopy and colonoscopy was not the standard of care (9,13,16). Thus, the incidence of intestinal polyp formation on teduglutide treatment in pediatric patients remains unknown.”
  • “A recent retrospective review of adult patients with SBS showed increased small bowel polyp formation in 8 out of 35 patients (22.9%) on long-term teduglutide use… 3 were identified as adenomas with low-grade dysplasia… (14)”
  • “In general, isolated foveolar hyperplasia has not been identified as a premalignant lesion…The connection between foveolar hyperplasia and development of dysplasia, though, remains poorly understood, and further work delineating the natural history of foveolar polyps in the context of teduglutide is important.”

Related article: A Fifi et al. JPGN 2023; 77: 666-671. This is a post-hoc analysis showing improving stool consistency in 101 patients treated in open-label studies. Patients had mean drop of 20 mL/kg/day in parental fluid volume (compared to 7 mL/kg/day in the standard care treatment group).

My take: This case report indicates that endoscopic monitoring (possibly both upper endoscopy and colonoscopy) is needed in teduglutide-exposed patients. In addition, careful consent of the patients is prudent indicating the uncertain long-term effects. Finally, it would be a good idea to enroll all patients in a registry as well.

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