scholarly journals Magnification endoscopy in combination with acetic acid enhancement and narrow-band imaging for the accurate diagnosis of colonic neoplasms

2020 ◽  
Vol 08 (04) ◽  
pp. E488-E497
Author(s):  
Kotaro Shibagaki ◽  
Norihisa Ishimura ◽  
Takafumi Yuki ◽  
Hideaki Taniguchi ◽  
Masahito Aimi ◽  
...  

Abstract Background and study aims Magnification endoscopy with narrow-band imaging (NBIME) and NBIME with acetic acid enhancement (A-NBIME) enable visualization of the vascular and microstructural patterns of colorectal polyp. We compared the diagnostic accuracy and reproducibility of white light endoscopy (WLE), NBIME, and A-NBIME for predictive histologic diagnosis. Patients and methods Consecutive colorectal polyps (N = 628; 38 hyperplasias, 488 adenomas, 72 M-SM1 cancers, and 30 SM2 cancers) were photographed with WLE, NBIME, and A-NBIME. Endoscopic images were independently reviewed by three experts, according to the traditional criteria for WLE, the Japan NBI Expert Team classification for NBIME, and pit pattern classification for A-NBIME to compare diagnostic accuracy and interobserver diagnostic agreement among modalities. Results The specificity (95 % confidence interval) of hyperplasia and SM2 cancer with WLE were 98.2 % (96.8 %–99.1%) and 99.4 % (98.5 %–99.9 %), respectively, showing high accuracy for endoscopic resection without magnifying observation. Diagnostic accuracy of WLE, NBIME, and A-NBIME was 80.8 % (77.4 %–83.8 %), 79.3 % (75.9 %–82.4 %), and 86.1 % (83.2 %–88.7 %), respectively, showing the highest accuracy for A-NBIME among modalities (P < .05). NBIME showed a lower PPV for M-SM1 cancer (P < .05), as with WLE (P = .08) compared to A-NBIME. Fleiss’s kappa values for WLE, NBIME, and A-NBIME diagnosis were 0.43 (0.39 – 0.46), 0.52 (0.49 – 0.56) and 0.65 (0.62 – 0.69), respectively, showing insufficient reproducibility of WLE and superiority of A-NBIME among modalities. Conclusion WLE showed high accuracy for endoscopic resection of colorectal polyps in expert diagnosis. NBIME demonstrated a higher diagnostic reproducibility than WLE. A-NBIME showed possible superiority among modalities in both diagnostic accuracy and reproducibility.

Endoscopy ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 48 (01) ◽  
pp. 16-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kotaro Shibagaki ◽  
Yuji Amano ◽  
Norihisa Ishimura ◽  
Hideaki Taniguchi ◽  
Hiraku Fujita ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jie Sha ◽  
Pin Wang ◽  
Nan Sang ◽  
Huiai Zhang ◽  
Aiping Yang ◽  
...  

AbstractThis prospective study was aimed to evaluate the clinical value of narrow-band imaging (NBI), magnification endoscopy with narrow-band imaging (NBIME) and magnification endoscopy with acetic acid enhancement and narrow-band imaging (AA-NBIME) in the diagnosis of small colorectal polyps. We studied 261 small colorectal polyps from 122 patients with the use of above three techniques. Lesions were resected for histopathological analysis. The endoscopic images were independently reviewed by three experts and three non-experts and the diagnostic accuracy and image definition were compared among the modalities. The “experts-agreed” diagnostic accuracy was 87.7% for NBI versus 91.6% for NBIME versus 94.6% for AA-NBIME. The “non-experts-agreed” diagnostic accuracy was 80.1% for NBI versus 84.3% for NBIME versus 89.3% for AA-NBIME. All experts and non-experts diagnosed the small colorectal polyps statistically more accurately with AA-NBIME than NBI (P < 0.05). In all three modalities, the expert group’s diagnostic accuracies were statistically significantly higher compared with the non-expert group. For experts, the Kappa values for AA-NBIME, NBIME and NBI diagnosis were 0.962 (0.892–1.032), 0.577 (0.507–0.647) and 0.567 (0.497–0.637), respectively; while for nonexperts, 0.818 (0.748–0.888), 0.532 (0.462–0.602) and 0.530 (0.460–0.600). This demonstrated a good reproducibility of AA-NBIME diagnosis. The average scores (experts and non-experts) of images acquired using AA-NBIME were significantly higher than those acquired using NBIME and ME (P < 0.05). AA-NBIME is a promising tool to clearly visualize the mucosal pit pattern (PP) of colorectal polyps for better differentiating neoplastic polyps from non-neoplastic ones.


Digestion ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 101 (3) ◽  
pp. 339-346
Author(s):  
Hiroto Suzuki ◽  
Takeshi Yamamura ◽  
Masanao Nakamura ◽  
Chen-Ming Hsu ◽  
Ming-Yao Su ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 107 (2) ◽  
pp. 231-239 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhammad W Shahid ◽  
Anna M Buchner ◽  
Michael G Heckman ◽  
Murli Krishna ◽  
Massimo Raimondo ◽  
...  

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