| Literature DB >> 25634542 |
Caryn S Ross-Innes1, Irene Debiram-Beecham1, Maria O'Donovan2, Elaine Walker1, Sibu Varghese1, Pierre Lao-Sirieix1, Laurence Lovat3, Michael Griffin4, Krish Ragunath5, Rehan Haidry3, Sarmed S Sami5, Philip Kaye5, Marco Novelli3, Babett Disep4, Richard Ostler6, Benoit Aigret6, Bernard V North6, Pradeep Bhandari7, Adam Haycock8, Danielle Morris9, Stephen Attwood10, Anjan Dhar11, Colin Rees12, Matthew D D Rutter13, Peter D Sasieni6, Rebecca C Fitzgerald1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Barrett's esophagus (BE) is a commonly undiagnosed condition that predisposes to esophageal adenocarcinoma. Routine endoscopic screening for BE is not recommended because of the burden this would impose on the health care system. The objective of this study was to determine whether a novel approach using a minimally invasive cell sampling device, the Cytosponge, coupled with immunohistochemical staining for the biomarker Trefoil Factor 3 (TFF3), could be used to identify patients who warrant endoscopy to diagnose BE. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25634542 PMCID: PMC4310596 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001780
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Figure 1Study CONSORT diagram detailing the flow of control and Barrett's esophagus patients (cases) through the study.
Patients who were unable to swallow the Cytosponge or whose Cytosponge sample failed processing were excluded from the study. Exact numbers of control and BE patients who successfully completed the study are noted.
Demographics of the BEST2 Study patient cohorts.
| Variable | Controls | BE Cases |
|---|---|---|
| Number | 463 | 647 |
| Age (years)—median (IQR) | 56 (44–66) | 66 (58–73) |
| Ethnicity—number (percent) | ||
| White | 428 (92.5%) | 626 (96.8%) |
| Other | 34 (7.3%) | 12 (1.8%) |
| Missing data | 1 (0.2%) | 9 (1.4%) |
| Male:female ratio | 1.0:1.3 | 4.0:1.0 |
| BMI—median (IQR) | 26.8 (24.0–30.2) | 28.1 (25.6–31.2) |
| Waist-to-hip ratio—median (IQR) | 0.88 (0.83–0.94) | 0.95 (0.90–0.99) |
| Hiatus hernia—percent | 34.5% | 80.6% |
| Maximum length of BE (cm)—median (IQR) | n/a | 5 (3–8) |
aBE defined as endoscopically visible columnar-lined esophagus that measured at least 1 cm circumferentially or at least 3 cm in non-circumferential tongues (Prague classification ≥C1 or ≥M3).
bSex ratio rounded to the nearest tenth.
n/a, not applicable.
Figure 2Acceptability of endoscopy and the Cytosponge test.
Patients were asked to rate the procedures using a visual analogue acceptability scale after swallowing the Cytosponge and after endoscopy. The colors representing the different acceptability scores are shown on the right-hand side, with 0 representing the worst experience ever, 5 representing a neutral experience, and 10 representing the best experience ever. The dotted red line marks the boundary between mildly unpleasant or worse (left of the line, score of 0–3) and acceptable scores (right of the line, score of 4 or more), for ease of comparison between the two procedures.
Figure 3TFF3 immunohistochemical staining of Cytosponge samples.
TFF3 staining was performed on all Cytosponge samples to test the sensitivity and specificity of the Cytosponge-TFF3 test for diagnosing BE. TFF3 was scored in a binary fashion, with samples with one or more TFF3-positive goblet cells being classed as positive. Shown are immunohistochemical images illustrating examples of TFF3-negative and-positive staining at low magnification (100×) and high magnification (400×).
Sensitivity of the Cytosponge-TFF3 in different groups of patients (full dataset in S2 and S3 Tables).
| Patients | Total Number | TFF3 Positive | TFF3 Negative | Sensitivity (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| All BE patients (≥C1 or ≥M3) | 596 | 476 | 120 | 79.9% (76.4%–83.0%) |
| Segment length | ||||
| ≥C1 | 533 | 434 | 109 | 79.5% (75.9%–82.9%) |
| ≥C2 | 416 | 349 | 67 | 83.9% (80.0%–87.3%) |
| ≥C3 | 320 | 279 | 41 | 87.2% (83.0%–90.6%) |
| Dysplasia | ||||
| NDBE | 372 | 294 | 78 | 79.0% (74.5%–83.0%) |
| Indefinite for dysplasia | 46 | 34 | 12 | 73.9% (58.9%–85.7%) |
| LGD | 77 | 63 | 14 | 80.5% (69.9%–88.7%) |
| HGD/IMC | 101 | 85 | 16 | 84.2% (75.6%–90.7%) |
| Patients having two Cytosponge tests | 107 | 95 | 11 | 89.7% (82.3%–94.8%) |
C, Circumferential length; IMC, intramucosal carcinoma; LGD, low grade dysplasia; M, maximal length; NDBE, non-dysplastic BE.
Clinical covariates have no impact on sensitivity and specificity of the test.
| Covariate | Sensitivity (95% CI) | Cases | Specificity (95% CI) | Controls | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TFF3 Positive | Total | TFF3 Negative | Total | |||
| BMI (kg/m2) | ||||||
| 0–25 | 0.80% (0.72%–0.87%) | 101 | 126 | 0.93% (0.88%–0.96%) | 144 | 155 |
| 25–30 | 0.80% (0.75%–0.85%) | 215 | 268 | 0.92% (0.87%–0.96%) | 159 | 172 |
| 30+ | 0.80% (0.74%–0.85%) | 155 | 194 | 0.92% (0.85%–0.96%) | 101 | 110 |
| Age (years) | ||||||
| 0–54.9 | 0.78% (0.69%–0.85%) | 85 | 109 | 0.94% (0.89%–0.97%) | 188 | 201 |
| 54.9–64.9 | 0.81% (0.74%–0.87%) | 120 | 148 | 0.94% (0.88%–0.98%) | 107 | 114 |
| 64.9+ | 0.80% (0.75%–0.84%) | 271 | 339 | 0.90% (0.83%–0.95%) | 116 | 129 |
| Waist-to-hip ratio | ||||||
| 0–1 | 0.81% (0.77%–0.85%) | 386 | 476 | 0.92% (0.89%–0.95%) | 374 | 405 |
| 1–2 | 0.75% (0.65%–0.83%) | 80 | 107 | 0.93% (0.78%–0.99%) | 28 | 30 |
| Gender | ||||||
| Male | 0.81% (0.77%–0.84%) | 384 | 475 | 0.91% (0.86%–0.94%) | 177 | 195 |
| Female | 0.76% (0.67%–0.83%) | 92 | 121 | 0.94% (0.90%–0.97%) | 234 | 249 |
| Overall | 0.80% (0.76%–0.83%) | 476 | 596 | 0.92% (0.90%–0.95%) | 411 | 445 |
Figure 4Modeling of Cytosponge-TFF3 testing and risk stratification in the primary care population with reflux symptoms.
Extrapolation of findings to a hypothetical population of 10,000 individuals with reflux symptoms using a sensitivity and specificity of 79.9% and 92.4%, respectively, for the TFF3 screen, and a sensitivity and specificity of 86% (95% CI of 65%–96%) and 100% (95% CI of 94.6%–100%), respectively, for TP53 mutation screening for detection of HGD. The assumed prevalence of BE was 3%. In patients found to be high risk, endoscopy within 6–8 wk would be recommended. For low-risk patients, a repeat Cytosponge-TFF3 test would be performed at an interval of several years (exact timing to be determined) in case they had become TP53 positive over this time period. In the TFF3-negative arm, the repeat Cytosponge testing might not be necessary. If it took place, repeat testing would be recommended within 6 to 8 wk of the delivery of the TFF3-negative results.