by Jason Wasserman MD PhD FRCPC
March 30, 2026
A hyperplastic polyp is a common benign (non-cancerous) growth that develops on the inner surface of the colon or rectum. Hyperplastic polyps are not precancerous. They do not contain the abnormal cells that lead to cancer, and in most cases, finding one does not change your cancer screening schedule at all. If this finding is in your report, it is reassuring news.
The word hyperplastic means overgrown — the cells in these polyps have multiplied more than usual, producing a small bump on the colon lining. Despite that overgrowth, the cells themselves look essentially normal under the microscope. This distinguishes hyperplastic polyps from precancerous polyps, such as adenomas or sessile serrated lesions, in which the cells exhibit abnormal features.
Most hyperplastic polyps cause no symptoms. They are usually small — typically less than 5 mm — and discovered incidentally during a colonoscopy performed for routine cancer screening or for an unrelated reason. Rarely, a large hyperplastic polyp may cause rectal bleeding or a change in bowel habits, but this is uncommon.
Hyperplastic polyps are most commonly found in the rectum and sigmoid colon — the lower left part of the large intestine. They are much less common on the right side of the colon (the ascending colon and cecum).
Location matters for one specific reason: hyperplastic polyps in the right colon can be difficult to distinguish from sessile serrated lesions under the microscope, which are precancerous. When a pathologist identifies what appears to be a hyperplastic polyp in the right colon, your doctor may recommend a somewhat earlier follow-up colonoscopy than would otherwise be needed — not because the polyp itself is dangerous, but to make sure the diagnosis is accurate and that nothing is missed.
Hyperplastic polyps form when cells in the colon lining begin to grow and divide more than usual, producing a small overgrowth. This is typically harmless. The exact cause is not fully known, but factors that increase the likelihood of developing hyperplastic polyps include:
The diagnosis is made by a pathologist who examines the removed tissue under a microscope. The polyp is removed during a colonoscopy using a polypectomy — removal with a small wire loop — or biopsy forceps for very small polyps.
The pathologist looks for the features described below and confirms that the cells lack the abnormal changes that would make the polyp precancerous.
Under the microscope, a hyperplastic polyp shows tightly packed glands with a serrated (saw-tooth) pattern near the surface of the lining. The cells are mature and well organised. They produce mucin, the substance that normally lubricates the colon. The base of the glands — unlike in sessile serrated lesions — looks entirely normal, with straight, regularly spaced crypts. There are no signs of dysplasia (abnormal cell changes that could lead to cancer).
There are two main subtypes of hyperplastic polyp, distinguished by their microscopic appearance:
These subtypes behave the same way and have the same clinical significance. The distinction is noted for classification purposes and does not affect your treatment or follow-up.
The margin is the edge of the tissue that was removed. The pathologist examines it to determine whether the entire polyp was taken out.
In most cases, no additional treatment is needed after a hyperplastic polyp is removed. Because these polyps are benign and not precancerous, finding one or a few small hyperplastic polyps in the rectum or sigmoid colon does not change your standard colorectal cancer screening schedule. Your doctor will typically recommend continuing with the same interval they would have used, regardless of this finding.
There are two situations where closer follow-up may be recommended:
If other types of polyps — such as adenomas or sessile serrated lesions — were found during the same colonoscopy, those findings will take priority in determining your follow-up schedule, since they carry more clinical significance than a hyperplastic polyp.