Colonic neuroendocrine tumors (NETs), excluding rectal NETs, are often described as relatively common and aggressive, with inferior median survival compared with other gastrointestinal (GI) primary sites. However, epidemiological databases may conflate well-differentiated NETs with poorly differentiated neuroendocrine carcinomas (NECs), leading to a lack of precise data on the prevalence, clinical behavior, and prognosis of well-differentiated colonic NETs. We analyzed a large institutional database to identify patients with well-differentiated NETs originating in the colon, excluding rectal NETs. Cecal NETs were included; however, ileocecal NETs (overlapping the ileocecal valve) were not. We assessed their prevalence compared with other primary sites, grade, stage, and prognosis. Among 3639 patients with gastroenteropancreatic (GEP) NETs, only 19 (0.5%) had well-differentiated colonic NETs. This included 11 cecal and eight sigmoid colon primaries (two described as "rectosigmoid"). No tumors originated in the ascending, transverse, or descending colon. Sigmoid NETs were typically early-stage polyps discovered incidentally during colonoscopy. In contrast, eight of the 11 cecal NETs metastasized (p = .04). Six of the cecal primary patients (55%) exhibited carcinoid syndrome versus none of the sigmoid primary cases (p = .01). Well-differentiated colon NETs are exceptionally rare, comprising approximately 0.5% of GEP-NETs. These tumors fall into two distinct categories: cecal NETs, which resemble ileal NETs in behavior, and sigmoid NETs, which appear similar to rectal NETs. The broad categorization of colonic "NETs" in epidemiologic databases likely includes NECs, obscuring the true clinical picture.

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