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Small bowel adenocarcinoma

Last updated: October 29, 2025

Summarytoggle arrow icon

Small bowel adenocarcinoma is a rare malignancy of the gastrointestinal tract that most commonly occurs in the duodenum. The median age at diagnosis is 66 years. Risk factors include heavy alcohol use, smoking, certain medical conditions (e.g., IBD, celiac disease), and familial cancer syndromes (e.g., Lynch syndrome). The clinical presentation is often nonspecific; symptoms include intermittent crampy abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, gastrointestinal bleeding, and weight loss. Diagnosis requires a biopsy, which is typically obtained via endoscopy, and is supported by laboratory studies and cross-sectional imaging. Management for localized disease is primarily surgical resection, often followed by adjuvant chemotherapy based on the stage and molecular features. For unresectable or metastatic disease, treatment involves systemic therapy; the specific regimen is chosen based on mismatch repair or microsatellite instability status.

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Epidemiologytoggle arrow icon

  • Incidence: 2.6 per 100,000 men and 2.0 per 100,000 women [1]
  • Median age at diagnosis: 66 years [1]
  • Anatomic distribution [2]

Epidemiological data refers to the US, unless otherwise specified.

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Etiologytoggle arrow icon

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Classificationtoggle arrow icon

Classification Description
TNM classification for small bowel adenocarcinoma [1]
Primary tumor (T)
T1
T2
  • Penetrates through the submucosa into the muscularis propria
T3
  • Penetrates through the muscularis propria into the subserosa
  • OR extends into nonperitonealized perimuscular tissue
T4
Regional lymph nodes (N)
N0
N1
N2
Distant metastasis (M)
M0
M1
Stage groupings
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Clinical featurestoggle arrow icon

The clinical presentation is often nonspecific. [1][2]

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Diagnosistoggle arrow icon

Approach [1]

Laboratory studies [1]

Endoscopy [1]

Imaging [1]

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Differential diagnosestoggle arrow icon

The differential diagnoses listed here are not exhaustive.

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Managementtoggle arrow icon

General principles [1]

  • Treatment plans should be developed and overseen by a multidisciplinary team (e.g., medical oncology, surgical oncology, palliative care).
  • Surgical resection with lymphadenectomy is the cornerstone of management for localized disease.
  • Systemic therapy is based on stage and molecular features.
  • Neoadjuvant or palliative approaches are used for unresectable or metastatic disease.

Localized resectable disease (stage I–III) [1]

Locally unresectable or medically inoperable disease [1]

Distant metastatic disease (stage IV) [1]

Posttreatment surveillance [1]

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disclaimer Evidence-based content, created and peer-reviewed by physicians. Read the disclaimer