The Onco Life Podcast
Welcome to The Onco Life Podcast, your trusted source for cancer care insights, treatment updates, and patient-centered education. Hosted by the team at Onco Life Centre in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, this podcast is designed to guide patients, caregivers, and listeners through every stage of the cancer journey.
Each episode features expert advice from our oncologists, wellness tips, treatment innovations, and answers to the most common questions about cancer types, therapies, and recovery.
🎧 Empowering you with knowledge, support, and compassionate care—every step of the way.
📍 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
🌐 Learn more at oncolifecentre.com
The Onco Life Podcast
Colon Polyps and Colorectal Cancer Development: What You Need to Know
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
In this episode, we break down how colon polyps can develop into colorectal cancer and why early screening is one of the best ways to protect your long-term health.
You’ll learn:
- What colon polyps are and how they form
- The difference between adenomatous, serrated, hyperplastic, and inflammatory polyps
- Why some polyps are considered pre-cancerous
- Common risk factors, including age, genetics, smoking, and inflammatory bowel disease
- Why do most colon polyps cause no symptoms
- Warning signs like blood in stool and bowel habit changes
- How colonoscopy helps detect and remove polyps before cancer develops
- Why screening should begin at age 45 for most adults
- Lifestyle changes that may help reduce colorectal cancer risk
- The importance of long-term monitoring after polyp removal
Understanding colon polyps and colorectal cancer development can help you take proactive steps toward prevention. Early detection, regular screening, and healthy lifestyle habits can greatly reduce the risk of serious disease and support long-term colon health.
Blog Link: Colon Polyps and Colorectal Cancer Development
Thank you for listening to The Onco Life Podcast, your trusted source for expert cancer information and patient-centered education.
Author: Dr. CHRISTINA NG VAN TZE
📍 Visit us at oncolifecentre.com
📞 Call: +603-2242-2620
📧 Book a consultation or ask a question — we're here to support your journey.
Welcome to the Uncle Life Center podcast. And uh welcome to today's deep dive. We are really thrilled to have you with us because today's mission is, well, incredibly specific and potentially life-saving. Yeah. We are setting out to demystify exactly what is happening in the dark, quiet corners of your gut.
SPEAKER_02It's a hugely important topic.
SPEAKER_00Right. But more than just understanding the biology, our primary goal is to hand you what is arguably the ultimate undisputed tool for cancer prevention.
SPEAKER_02It really is. I mean, it is basically the pinnacle of preventative medicine. We spend so much of our lives, you know, agonizing over health risks we have absolutely zero control over.
SPEAKER_00Oh, absolutely. Like environmental toxins or just random genetic luck.
SPEAKER_02Exactly. But the topic on the table today is the exact opposite of that. It is a roadmap where you are entirely in the driver's seat, provided you know how to read the signs.
SPEAKER_00Okay, let's unpack this. We are pulling our insights today from two really vital sources. The first is a highly detailed clinical article published today, May 8, 2026, by Dr. Christina Ngbense.
SPEAKER_01Yes, and it's titled Colon Polyps in Colorectal Cancer Development.
SPEAKER_00Right. And to ground that clinical theory in real-world application, we are also looking at an in-depth overview of the Onko Life Center in Malaysia, exploring their comprehensive oncology services and uh their service areas.
SPEAKER_02It's a brilliant pairing, really, because you cannot really separate the two. Dr. Eng provides the cellular mechanics, like what is going wrong and why.
SPEAKER_00And then the Onko Life Center source gives us the logistical reality of where you go and how you secure the highest level of screening and treatment when the stakes are that high.
SPEAKER_02Exactly.
SPEAKER_00But before we go any further, I want to do a quick vibe check with you, the listener. The moment the word cancer enters the chat, the natural human response is to just tense up.
SPEAKER_02Oh, for sure. It is a heavy word.
SPEAKER_00It is. But this deep dive is not a doom and gloom scenario. This is actually an incredibly optimistic narrative. This is a story about taking the wheel, leveraging the massive head start your body gives you, and making highly informed decisions.
SPEAKER_02To really grasp how much power you have in preventing colorectal cancer, we have to zoom way, way in. We have to look at the precursors.
SPEAKER_00The early signs, you mean.
SPEAKER_02Right. Long before cancer is a clinical reality, it starts as a tiny, often completely imperceptible cellular mistake. We are talking about colon polyps.
SPEAKER_00So I have always thought about polyps visually as something like a skin tag, you know, a little raised bump that occasionally pops up on your neck or arm.
SPEAKER_02Sure, I can see that.
SPEAKER_00Right. So if we are looking at the inner lining of the colon, are colon polyps basically just skin tags on the inside of your body?
SPEAKER_02Visually, um, it is an easy analogy to make, but biologically, it is actually a very dangerous way to think about them.
SPEAKER_00Wait, really? Why is that?
SPEAKER_02Well, a skin tag is a fundamentally benign overgrowth. Its biological intention is to just sit there and do nothing. Polyps, however, are not a single monolith, and they are definitely not all benign.
SPEAKER_00Okay, so what exactly are they doing?
SPEAKER_02A polyp develops when the cells lining your colon lose their normal regulatory signals. Instead of dying off and being replaced in a neat, orderly fashion, they start dividing faster than they should, and they pile up into a mass.
SPEAKER_00So they are actively dividing, which means they have momentum. They aren't just sitting there like a benign bump, they are doing something.
SPEAKER_02Precisely. And this is why treating them all like harmless skin tags leads to critical medical errors. Dr. Eng breaks them down into specific categories in her article, and understanding the nuance between them is the whole key to prevention.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Ross Powell Okay. Lay it on me. What's the first type?
SPEAKER_02First, you have hyperplastic polyps. These are the most common, and they are probably the closest thing to your skin tag analogy. Under a microscope, their cells look relatively normal, just uh slightly crowded.
SPEAKER_00And do they turn into cancer?
SPEAKER_02Rarely. They rarely turn into cancer.
SPEAKER_00So if a doctor finds a hyperplastic polyp, they might just note it and move on. What is the next category?
SPEAKER_02Aaron Powell Next, we have inflammatory polyps. The mechanism here is entirely different. These usually develop in patients dealing with chronic inflammation in their gut, such as those with inflammatory bowel disease or IBD.
SPEAKER_00Ah, okay. So the tissue is already compromised.
SPEAKER_02Exactly. When the colon lining is constantly irritated and constantly trying to heal itself, the cellular machinery gets overworked and polyps form as a reaction to that trauma.
SPEAKER_00It's like scar tissue forming over a wound that never quite heals.
SPEAKER_02That is a very accurate way to visualize it. But here is the critical pivot in Dr. Eng's research. The third type is the adenomatous polyp.
SPEAKER_00And these are the bad ones.
SPEAKER_02Yes. These are definitively classified as precancerous. They have already undergone specific genetic mutations that give them a known documented pathway to turning into a malignancy.
SPEAKER_00Meaning they aren't just growing, their actual DNA blueprint is fundamentally changed for the worse.
SPEAKER_02Yes. And finally, there are the serrated polyps. This is a very specific group that includes things called sessile serrated lesions and traditional serrated adenomas, or TSAs.
SPEAKER_00TSAs got it. Why are they called serrated?
SPEAKER_02Because under a microscope, the cells literally look like the jagged teeth of a saw. What's fascinating here is that simply knowing the specific type of polyp completely changes your biological forecast.
SPEAKER_00Because they behave differently.
SPEAKER_02Exactly. Serrated lesions, for example, mutate through a completely different biological pathway than adenomatous polyps, often bypassing the body's normal immune detection.
SPEAKER_00Oh wow.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, they carry a significantly higher chance of turning malignant, and they tend to be flat, making them much harder to spot.
SPEAKER_00That distinction completely blows up the skin tag analogy. You aren't just looking for a bump, you are interrogating the cellular intent of that bump.
SPEAKER_02You hit the nail on the head.
SPEAKER_00Which brings up a very practical question about the timeline. If you have an adenomatous or serrated polyp actively mutating in your gut, how fast is this happening? Is this a scenario where you are fine in January and in grave danger by June?
SPEAKER_02Not at all. And this is honestly the most empowering piece of science in the entire deep dive. These lesions do not mutate into cancer overnight.
SPEAKER_00Okay, that's a relief.
SPEAKER_02The biological cascade, you know, the series of genetic errors required for a polyp to break through the colon wall and become malignant is incredibly inefficient. It takes a massive amount of time.
SPEAKER_00How much time are we talking about?
SPEAKER_02We are looking at a window of about five to ten years.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell A five to ten year window. I mean, in the world of oncology, a decade feels like an absolute eternity.
SPEAKER_02It is a phenomenal advantage, but there is a massive catch. We call it the symptom paradox.
SPEAKER_00Right. Dr. Eng's article does list some potential symptoms. It mentions that a patient might notice blood in their stool or experience a change in bowel habits.
SPEAKER_02Like sudden persistent constipation or diarrhea.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. Or maybe deal with unexplained fatigue and mild abdominal discomfort.
SPEAKER_02Yes, those are the textbook warning signs. But the paradox, and if you remember only one thing from today, let it be this, is that the vast majority of polyps cause absolutely zero symptoms. None whatsoever.
SPEAKER_00And this is where I really have to play devil's advocate for the listener. Because human nature dictates that we do not fix things unless they are broken.
SPEAKER_02That's very true.
SPEAKER_00If I am walking around, my digestion is perfectly fine, my energy levels are normal, and we just established that it takes a decade for a rogue polyp to actually become dangerous. Why should I worry about it right now? Why not just wait until I feel a slight twinge or see a warning sign?
SPEAKER_02It is a totally logical human response, but waiting is the trap. The mechanics of the colon explain why. The colon is a large, flexible tube. Right. A polyp that is one or two centimeters wide is simply not going to cause a blockage. Furthermore, the inner lining of your colon doesn't have the same somatic pain receptors your skin has.
SPEAKER_00So you literally can't feel it growing.
SPEAKER_02You can't. By the time you actually feel those symptoms, by the time the mass is large enough to cause significant bleeding, block digestion, or trigger severe pain, it has likely already progressed far beyond that initial easily manageable polyp stage.
SPEAKER_00Meaning it has likely become invasive.
SPEAKER_02Exactly.
SPEAKER_00So the lack of pain is a false flag.
SPEAKER_02Spot on.
SPEAKER_00We can intercept the threat before it even knows it's a threat.
SPEAKER_02Precisely.
SPEAKER_00It's like tracking a slow-moving storm on a radar weeks before it hits the coast. So how do we actively hunt these things down? If we can't feel them and they don't cause bleeding early on, how do we find them during that golden window?
SPEAKER_02This brings us to the magic of age 45. The universally recognized medical recommendation, heavily emphasized in Dr. Eng's article, is to begin regular colonoscopy screening at age 45.
SPEAKER_00Let's underscore that. But for the general population, 45 is the trigger point.
SPEAKER_02Exactly.
SPEAKER_00We really need to clarify the mechanics of the colonoscopy itself, because there is a huge psychological barrier here. A lot of people view screening merely as an observation tool, like getting an MRI.
SPEAKER_02Right. They think they just go to sleep and someone takes pictures.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. You go in, a technician takes some pictures, you wait a week in pure agony for a report, and then if they find something bad, you have to schedule a separate invasive surgery. But that is fundamentally not how a colonoscopy works.
SPEAKER_02That is a brilliant distinction to make. A colonoscopy is simultaneously diagnostic and therapeutic. It is a live intervention.
SPEAKER_00Tell me more about that.
SPEAKER_02When the gastroenterologist is navigating the colonoscope, they aren't just looking. The scope is equipped with tiny instruments like an electrocottery snare.
SPEAKER_00Oh wow.
SPEAKER_02Yeah. If they spot a neoplastic polyp, they loop the snare around it, apply a tiny bit of heat, and safely excise it right then and there.
SPEAKER_00They don't schedule a follow-up. They literally separate the mutated tissue from your body in real time.
SPEAKER_02Exactly. They physically remove the biological threat, they pull it out so it can be sent to a lab to determine if it was adenomatous or serrated, but the crucial part is that it is gone.
SPEAKER_00You wake up from the procedure and the cancer has been stopped in its tracks.
SPEAKER_02It's incredible.
SPEAKER_00So what does this all mean? It means the medical technology to completely short circuit this disease exists right now. But Dr. Eng's research doesn't let us off the hook by just saying, go to the doctor.
SPEAKER_02No, it puts a lot of responsibility back on our daily choices. We have to talk about lifestyle and risk reduction.
SPEAKER_00Because genetics and age are only part of the equation, right?
SPEAKER_02Exactly. We know certain hereditary mutations, like Lynch syndrome, drastically spike your risk, but your daily habits are the environment in which those genetics operate. Poor diet, chronic smoking, excess alcohol. These actively fuel the mutation process.
SPEAKER_00The source is very specific about the countermeasures. It emphasizes a high fiber diet, so packing your gut with fruits, vegetables, and whole grains. It also demands regular exercise, maintaining a healthy body weight, avoiding smoking, and severely limiting the intake of red and processed meats. But why? What is the actual mechanism connecting a piece of bacon to a polyp?
SPEAKER_02If we connect this to the bigger picture, it all comes back to transit time and cellular inflammation. When you eat a diet high in processed meats and low in fiber, digestion slows down. Makes sense. The byproducts of that digestion, some of which are carcinogenic, sit against the lining of your colon for much longer. Furthermore, an unhealthy lifestyle keeps your body in a state of systemic, low-grade inflammation.
SPEAKER_00And earlier we talked about how inflammation causes cells to divide rapidly to repair tissue, right?
SPEAKER_02Yes. By eating fiber, you speed up transit time, sweeping toxins out. By exercising, you improve gut motility and reduce systemic inflammation. You are literally engineering a cellular environment where polyps struggle to survive.
SPEAKER_00That makes the daily choices feel so much more impactful. The bowl of oatmeal isn't just healthy, it's a structural defense mechanism.
SPEAKER_02It really is.
SPEAKER_00But let's say you are doing everything right, you hit age 45, or you have that genetic history, and it is time to take action. Knowing the biology is only half the battle. The real world application is where do you go?
SPEAKER_02Right. You don't want to trust this golden window to just anyone. You need expert intervention.
SPEAKER_00Which seamlessly brings us to our second source today, detailing the Onko Life Center.
SPEAKER_02Yes, the Onko Life Center.
SPEAKER_00It is located inside Wismo Life Care in Bangzar South, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. When you read through their overview, the very first thing that jumps off the page isn't the technology, it's the architecture in the environment.
SPEAKER_02They go out of their way to describe a modern, comfortable facility meticulously designed to create a healing and soothing space.
SPEAKER_00And honestly, when you are dealing with the anxiety of cancer screening or genetic testing, the psychological impact of walking into a warm, calming environment rather than a cold, sterile, fluorescent hospital basement cannot be overstated.
SPEAKER_02Aaron Ross Powell The environmental psychology is a critical component of patient care, absolutely. It lowers cortisol, which is vital, but the aesthetic is just the wrapping paper for the medical reality inside those walls.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Because they are vigorously striving to be among the premier cancer treatment and genetic centers globally, right?
SPEAKER_02Aaron Ross Powell Exactly. They are integrating the absolute latest treatment technology breakthroughs with incredibly advanced diagnostic modalities.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Here's where it gets really interesting and where the data surprised me. When you look at their service area, they are not just a local hub for Malaysia, they are a global destination.
SPEAKER_02Oh, absolutely.
SPEAKER_00Over the years, they have successfully treated patients traveling from Germany, Iran, Qatar, Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, the Philippines, Singapore, China, Japan, and the UK.
SPEAKER_02Aaron Powell, we really need to pause and analyze that demographic because that international draw reveals a lot. We aren't just talking about patients from neighboring countries seeking better infrastructure. When patients from Germany, Japan, or the UK, which are countries with universally recognized, highly advanced medical systems, are deliberately boarding planes to seek oncology care in Kuala Lumpur, it points to a very specific synthesis of value, expertise, and comprehensive care that they cannot easily access at home.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. You don't fly past Singapore or Japan unless there is a compelling specific reason. What is the mechanism of their care that creates that kind of gravity?
SPEAKER_02It is their multidisciplinary, highly cohesive approach. In many medical systems, care is siloed. You see a geneticist in one building, a gastroenterologist in another, and an oncologist weeks later across town. Oh, that sounds exhausting. It is. The Onco Life Center brings an entire array of specialists together under one roof. They offer medical oncology, advanced cancer genomics, immunotherapy, hormonal therapy, and crucially cancer genetics counseling and testing.
SPEAKER_00Let's tie that genetic counseling right back to Dr. Ang's article.
SPEAKER_02Yeah.
SPEAKER_00If my grandfather had colorectal cancer, I don't just want a standard screening. I need to know my precise genetic blueprint. By having geneticists in-house, they can identify the exact mutation I carry and tell the gastroenterologist, hey, do not wait 10 years. This patient's mutation means polyps grow in three years. Screen them now.
SPEAKER_02That is the exact clinical advantage of a cohesive team. But there's another technological detail in the OncO Life Center source that is vital to understand, particularly for patients who have moved beyond prevention and are facing active cancer treatment.
SPEAKER_00Oh, what is that?
SPEAKER_02They have built a state-of-the-art cytotoxic drug reconstitution complex, a CDR, right inside the center.
SPEAKER_00Cytotoxic, meaning substances that are highly toxic to living cells. We're talking about the preparation of chemotherapy drugs.
SPEAKER_02Yes. And preparing chemotherapy isn't like mixing a standard medication. These are incredibly powerful, volatile chemical agents. The CDR complex is effectively a highly controlled clean room. It uses specialized negative pressure isolation and hyperfiltered airflow.
SPEAKER_00So the air in the room is constantly being sucked inward and filtered rather than blowing out into the hallway.
SPEAKER_02Precisely. The physics of the room serve a dual purpose. First, it protects the incredibly sensitive chemotherapy drugs from any microscopic airborne contaminants in the environment, ensuring the patient gets a perfectly pure dose.
SPEAKER_00And the second purpose.
SPEAKER_02Second, it protects the clinical pharmacists who are handling these toxic agents day in and day out from inhaling aerosolized particles.
SPEAKER_00Wow. The fact that their CDR complex is rigorously certified by the National Pharmaceutical Regulatory Agency of Malaysia's Ministry of Health is a massive green flag.
SPEAKER_02It means they are operating under the strictest, most unforgiving standard operating procedures for safety and quality control.
SPEAKER_00It is the ultimate combination of high-tech precision, uncompromising safety standards, and that holistic, soothing patient environment we talked about earlier.
SPEAKER_02Exactly.
SPEAKER_00And on a purely logistical level, they make themselves incredibly accessible. They're open Monday through Friday from 7 30 a.m. to 5.0 p.m. And they are open on Saturdays from 7 30 a.m. until 1 3 RPM.
SPEAKER_02That Saturday window is not a trivial detail. When we look at why people skip preventative care, it is rarely because they don't care about their health. Right. It's often because they simply cannot afford to take a Tuesday off from work. Lowering that logistical barrier by offering weekend hours directly translates to more people getting scream during that golden window.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Ross Powell It totally removes the friction from the process. Okay. Which perfectly brings us to the conclusion of our deep dive today. When we stitch all of this evidence together, the narrative is overwhelmingly positive.
SPEAKER_02Yes, it is.
SPEAKER_00Colon polyps are silent, sneaky cellular errors. Yes, they are almost entirely symptomless, and yes, if left completely ignored, they can mutate into a deadly disease. But they are slow.
SPEAKER_02Very slow.
SPEAKER_00We have a massive five to ten year head start. By managing our diet and inflammation, by marking age 45 on the calendar for a colonoscopy, and by leveraging the cohesive, advanced expertise of facilities like the Onko Life Center, you hold the power to physically intercept and stop the disease before it ever truly begins.
SPEAKER_02It is the absolute gold standard of preventative medicine. But looking at the data, it leaves us with a rather profound and maybe slightly uncomfortable question to walk away with. Since the science is settled and we know that the simple physical removal of a polyps stops colorectal cancer in its tracks, could it be that the single greatest obstacle to eradicating this specific disease isn't a lack of medical technology or a lack of world-class facilities, but simply our own psychological hesitation to go get screened?
SPEAKER_00Wow. That is a brilliant question to sit with. The tools, the science, and the experts are all right there waiting for us. We just have to make the decision to use them. Thank you so much for joining us on this deep dive. We hope you feel equipped and deeply empowered to take absolute control of your gut health, to claim that golden window for yourself, and we will catch you on the next one.