BACKGROUND: Biopsy and polypectomy frequently are performed for lesions that carry a low risk of malignant transformation in the colon. Elastic scattering spectroscopy (ESS) is a novel optical biopsy technique that can distinguish, almost instantaneously, between normal and abnormal tissue in vivo, without the need to remove tissue. We assessed the diagnostic potential of ESS in the colon to differentiate normal colonic mucosa, chronic colitis, hyperplastic polyps, adenomatous polyps (with dysplasia), and adenocarcinoma. METHODS: ESS spectra were obtained from 138 sites in 45 patients at colonoscopy. They were then compared with conventional biopsy specimens taken from the same site, including normal colonic mucosa, hyperplastic polyps, adenomatous polyps, chronic colitis, and colon cancer. Spectral analysis was carried out with a validated computerized model that used principal component analysis followed by linear discriminant analysis. Cross validation was carried out by using 60% of the data as a "training set" and the remaining 40% of the data as a "test set." RESULTS: A total of 483 spectra were analyzed (290 normal, 19 hyperplastic, 69 adenomatous polyps, 74 chronic colitis, and 31 colorectal cancer). The sensitivity and the specificity of differentiating adenomas from hyperplastic polyps was 84% and 84%, respectively; for cancer from adenomatous polyps, 80% and 75%, respectively; for colitis from normal tissue, 77% and 82%, respectively; and for dysplastic mucosa (from polyps) from colitis, 85% and 88%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: ESS holds promise for differentiating colonic lesions with good accuracy and, therefore, is a potentially useful tool to make an instantaneous diagnosis during colonoscopy. It could prove a valuable aid for targeting biopsies in dysplasia surveillance in inflammatory bowel disease and for deciding which small polyps should be removed.
BACKGROUND: Biopsy and polypectomy frequently are performed for lesions that carry a low risk of malignant transformation in the colon. Elastic scattering spectroscopy (ESS) is a novel optical biopsy technique that can distinguish, almost instantaneously, between normal and abnormal tissue in vivo, without the need to remove tissue. We assessed the diagnostic potential of ESS in the colon to differentiate normal colonic mucosa, chronic colitis, hyperplastic polyps, adenomatous polyps (with dysplasia), and adenocarcinoma. METHODS:ESS spectra were obtained from 138 sites in 45 patients at colonoscopy. They were then compared with conventional biopsy specimens taken from the same site, including normal colonic mucosa, hyperplastic polyps, adenomatous polyps, chronic colitis, and colon cancer. Spectral analysis was carried out with a validated computerized model that used principal component analysis followed by linear discriminant analysis. Cross validation was carried out by using 60% of the data as a "training set" and the remaining 40% of the data as a "test set." RESULTS: A total of 483 spectra were analyzed (290 normal, 19 hyperplastic, 69 adenomatous polyps, 74 chronic colitis, and 31 colorectal cancer). The sensitivity and the specificity of differentiating adenomas from hyperplastic polyps was 84% and 84%, respectively; for cancer from adenomatous polyps, 80% and 75%, respectively; for colitis from normal tissue, 77% and 82%, respectively; and for dysplastic mucosa (from polyps) from colitis, 85% and 88%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS:ESS holds promise for differentiating colonic lesions with good accuracy and, therefore, is a potentially useful tool to make an instantaneous diagnosis during colonoscopy. It could prove a valuable aid for targeting biopsies in dysplasia surveillance in inflammatory bowel disease and for deciding which small polyps should be removed.
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