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by mhb 22 days ago
> Left alone that polyp will very likely eventually become cancer

I don't think so. You have a reference?

2 comments

You can't tell whether a polyp is cancerous or not before you have removed it, sent it to the lab and got the results back.

Therefore, all polyps should be removed. (Sending them all to the lab might be superfluous though)

Yes. That is the recommendation because "some" polyps are or may become cancerous. Not because all do. Unless you are saying that they do?
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9924026/

Though I regurgitate this information based off conversations with gastroenterologists not one off studies.

You claimed that "polyp will very likely eventually become cancer". I don't think this is true, in general, for polyps even though some might become cancerous. The paper you provided is pretty dense, but it didn't see to me as though it is saying that polyps generally become cancerous.
It's an internet forum, I didn't claim anything. And your doctor isn't going to first biopsy just a little bit of a polyp to determine if it's the "bad" kind, he's going to remove all of it.

It's annoying pedantry, a distinction without a difference.

Oh FFS. The difference between polyps very likely becoming cancer and some polyps maybe becoming cancer is not pedantry. And it probably wouldn't be as annoying to you if you just said that you didn't know instead of attempting to dig deeper by providing a source that you either didn't read or didn't understand.