| Literature DB >> 26989406 |
Rahul A Sheth1, Pedram Heidari2, Kevin Woods3, Daniel Chung4, Andrew T Chan5, Umar Mahmood2.
Abstract
White light colonoscopy is the current gold standard for early detection and treatment of colorectal cancer, but emerging data suggest that this approach is inherently limited. Even the most experienced colonoscopists, under optimal conditions, miss at least 15-25% of adenomas. There is an unmet clinical need for an adjunctive modality to white light colonoscopy with improved lesion detection and characterization. Optical molecular imaging with exogenously administered organic fluorochromes is a burgeoning imaging modality poised to advance the capabilities of colonoscopy. In this proof-of-principle clinical trial, we investigated the ability of a custom-designed fluorescent colonoscope and indocyanine green, a clinically approved fluorescent blood pool imaging agent, to visualize polyps in high risk patients with polyposis syndromes or known distal colonic masses. We demonstrate (1) the successful performance of real-time, wide-field fluorescence endoscopy using off-the-shelf equipment, (2) the ability of this system to identify polyps as small as 1 mm, and (3) the potential for fluorescence imaging signal intensity to differentiate between neoplastic and benign polyps.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26989406 PMCID: PMC4773548 DOI: 10.1155/2016/6184842
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gastroenterol Res Pract ISSN: 1687-6121 Impact factor: 2.260
Figure 1Schematic and photograph of dual channel clinical fluorescence endoscope.
Demographics of trial participants. The polyps seen in Participant 3 were only visualized on conventional endoscopy and not on experimental endoscopy.
| Participant | Gender | Age | Medical history | Prior surgery | # polyps | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nonneoplastic | Neoplastic | |||||
| 1 | M | 51 | EtOH abuse | None | 1 (3 mm) | 1 (18 mm) |
| 2 | M | 49 | FAP | Subtotal colectomy | 2 (1 mm, 1 mm) | 2 (4 mm, 10 mm) |
| 3 | F | 51 | FAP | Total colectomy with ileoanal anastomosis | 0 | 2 (2 mm, 2 mm) |
Evaluation of ICG uptake as a biomarker for polyp classification. A TBR > 1.2 as the cutoff value for neoplasia was used.
| ICG + | Neoplastic | |
|---|---|---|
| Yes | No | |
| Yes | 2 | 0 |
| No | 1 | 3 |
Figure 2Patient 1 fluorescence endoscopy. A benign polyp (hyperplastic, left) demonstrates no substantial ICG uptake over background (TBR 1.0), while a neoplastic one (tubular adenoma, right) does (TBR 1.7).
Figure 3Patient 2 fluorescence endoscopy. A 10 mm tubular adenoma demonstrates slightly greater ICG uptake over background (TBR 1.21).
Figure 4Patient 2 fluorescence endoscopy. A tubular adenoma is indistinguishable from adjacent normal colonic mucosa on ICG imaging, representing a false negative.
Figure 5ICG TBRs for all polyps identified and biopsied in the clinical trial. Horizontal dotted line = TBR cutoff of 1.2.