Tuesday Poster Session
Category: Colon

Bader Aldahash
King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre
Riyadh, Ar Riyad, Saudi Arabia
CMV is a double-stranded DNA herpes virus infecting 50–80% of US adults by age 40. Most infections are mild or asymptomatic. In immunocompromised patients, it can cause disseminated or localized end-organ disease. While 80–90% of transplant recipients are infected, only 30–40% develop active illness. Diagnosis involves colonoscopy with biopsy (polyps or pseudotumors). This case reports rare inflammatory and adenomatous polyps in a patient with CMV inclusions in an ascending colon polyp. CMV in immunocompetent colon tissue is unusual and may indicate underlying inflammation increasing susceptibility to infection.
A 73-year-old man with HTN, BPH, and IHD was transferred for screening colonoscopy. Labs showed WBC 6.7, neutrophil count 4.24, hemoglobin 14, platelets 228, CRP 1.3, Cr 76, and fecal calprotectin 176. He denied diarrhea, bleeding, or abdominal pain, with no family history of cancer and no weight changes. Colonoscopy revealed a 1.6 cm semi-pedunculated polyp in the proximal ascending colon, which was removed with en bloc resection (Figure 1). A 4 mm sessile polyp in the distal sigmoid was also excised. The rest of the colon appeared normal. Biopsy results are shown in (Figure 2).

