“Periampullary adenomas (PA), including both ampullary adenomas (AAs) and duodenal adenomas (DAs), are benign or premalignant mucosal lesions that are either hereditary, most associated with familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) syndrome, or sporadic, with no known genetic predisposition. In both cases, these uncommon mucosal-based lesions carry malignancy risk and present management dilemmas when not amenable to endoscopic
removal requiring surgical resection. FAP-related PAs are typically large and multifocal and often managed using the Spigelman classification, a point-based system that alerts the clinician of malignancy risk. This classification guides the decision toward continued endoscopic surveillance vs resection vis-à-vis pancreaticoduodenectomy (PD, also known as the “Whipple procedure”). No such scoring system exists for non-FAP-related PAs.”
