Development and Testing of a New Simplified Endoscopic Mucosal Assessment for Crohn’s Disease: The SEMA-CD

Author(s):  
Jeremy Adler ◽  
Sally J Eder ◽  
Acham Gebremariam ◽  
Kelley Rose French ◽  
Ila Moncion ◽  
...  

Abstract Objectives Endoscopic mucosal improvement is the gold standard for assessing treatment efficacy in clinical trials of Crohn’s disease. Current endoscopic indices are not routinely used in clinical practice. The lack of endoscopic information in large clinical registries limits their use for research. A quick, easy, and accurate method is needed for assessing mucosal improvement for clinicians in real-world practice. We developed and tested a novel simplified endoscopic mucosal assessment for Crohn’s disease (SEMA-CD). Methods We developed a 5-point scale for ranking endoscopic severity of ileum and colon based on Simple Endoscopic Score for Crohn’s disease (SES-CD). Central readers were trained to perform SES-CD and SEMA-CD. Pediatric patients with Crohn’s disease undergoing colonoscopy were enrolled. Video recordings of colonoscopies were de-identified and randomly assigned to blinded central readers. The SES-CD and SEMA-CD were scored for each video. The SES-CD was considered the validated standard for comparison. Correlation was assessed with Spearman rho, inter- and intrarater reliability with kappa statistics. Results Fifty-seven colonoscopies were read a total of 212 times. Correlation between SEMA-CD and SES-CD was strong (rho = 0.98, P < 0.0001). Inter-rater reliability for SEMA-CD was 0.80, and intrarater reliability was 0.83. Central readers rated SEMA-CD as easier than SES-CD. Conclusion The SEMA-CD accurately and reproducibly correlates with the standard SES-CD. Central readers viewed SEMA-CD as easier than SES-CD. Use of SEMA-CD in practice should enable collecting mucosal improvement information in large populations of patients. This will improve the quality of research that can be conducted in clinical registries. External validation is needed.

Author(s):  
Jeremy Adler ◽  
Sally J Eder ◽  
Acham Gebremariam ◽  
Christopher J Moran ◽  
Lee M Bass ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Endoscopic mucosal healing is the gold standard for evaluating Crohn’s disease (CD) treatment efficacy. Standard endoscopic indices are not routinely used in clinical practice, limiting the quality of retrospective research. A method for retrospectively quantifying mucosal activity from documentation is needed. We evaluated the simplified endoscopic mucosal assessment for CD (SEMA-CD) to determine if it can accurately quantify mucosal severity recorded in colonoscopy reports. Methods Pediatric patients with CD underwent colonoscopy that was video recorded and evaluated via Simple Endoscopic Score for CD (SES-CD) and SEMA-CD by central readers. Corresponding colonoscopy reports were de-identified. Central readers blinded to clinical history and video scoring were randomly assigned colonoscopy reports with and without images. The SEMA-CD was scored for each report. Correlation with video SES-CD and SEMA-CD were assessed with Spearman rho, inter-rater, and intrarater reliability with kappa statistics. Results Fifty-seven colonoscopy reports were read a total of 347 times. The simplified endoscopic mucosal assessment for CD without images correlated with both SES-CD and SEMA-CD from videos (rho = 0.82, P < .0001 for each). The addition of images provided similar correlation. Inter-rater and intrarater reliability were 0.93 and 0.92, respectively. Conclusions The SEMA-CD applied to retrospective evaluation of colonoscopy reports accurately and reproducibly correlates with SES-CD and SEMA-CD of colonoscopy videos. The SEMA-CD for evaluating colonoscopy reports will enable quantifying mucosal healing in retrospective research. Having objective outcome data will enable higher-quality research to be conducted across multicenter collaboratives and in clinical registries. External validation is needed.


2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S338-S339
Author(s):  
E C Brand ◽  
S G Elias ◽  
I M Minderhoud ◽  
J J van der Veen ◽  
F Baert ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 156 (6) ◽  
pp. S-848
Author(s):  
Eelco C. Brand ◽  
Sjoerd G. Elias ◽  
Itta M. Minderhoud ◽  
Julius J. van der Veen ◽  
Filip J. Baert ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (8) ◽  
pp. 1704-1718 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eelco C. Brand ◽  
Sjoerd G. Elias ◽  
Itta M. Minderhoud ◽  
Julius J. van der Veen ◽  
Filip J. Baert ◽  
...  

2002 ◽  
Vol 34 ◽  
pp. A83
Author(s):  
M. Da perno ◽  
G. Van Assche ◽  
F. Castellino ◽  
A. Carlino ◽  
R. Rocca ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S209-S210
Author(s):  
J Yao ◽  
B Hu ◽  
H Wang ◽  
M Zhi

Abstract Background Screening Crohn’s disease (CD) patients with high risk of early-onset surgery is crucial in launching therapeutic strategies. We have already identified disease behavior, smoking, body mass index, C-reactive protein level at diagnosis, previous perianal or intestinal surgery, maximum bowel wall thickness, use of biologics, and exclusive enteral nutrition as independent significant factors associated with 1-year surgery surgeries risk and further established a prognostic model (Fig.1,World J Gastroenterol. 2020;26(5):524–534). We aimed to validate this model using external cohort. Methods This retrospective study was conducted from Jan, 1, 2017, to Dec, 31, 2019 in three tertiary referral centers including Sixth Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-Sen University, Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University, and Second Affiliated Hospital of Military Medical University. Data of patients with a confirmed diagnosis of CD were collected through hospital electronic system. The published model was validated with calibration using the Hosmer-Lemeshow goodness-of-fit test, and discrimination was assessed using areas under the curve (AUC). Results A total of 756 patients were enrolled in our study with 101 (13.4%) excluded for the sake of incomplete data and loss of follow-up. Of the enrolled patients, 74.8% were male (n = 490) at the mean age of 28.4 ± 11.0 years, with the mean follow-up period of 21.8 ± 8.1 months. An ideal predictive ability of this model was confirmed by receiver operating characteristic curves and AUC as high as 94.5%. Besides, acceptable sensitivity of 69.5% and excellent specificity of 97.0% supported further clinical promotion and application of this model. Conclusion This model owns ideal ability to predict 1-year surgery risk in CD patients, which definitely help clinical decision-making and acid therapeutic strategies launching.


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