| Literature DB >> 29995243 |
Maria O'Donovan1,2, Rebecca C Fitzgerald3.
Abstract
New improved methods are required for the early detection of esophageal adenocarcinoma in order to reduce mortality from this aggressive cancer. In this review we discuss different screening methods which are currently under evaluation ranging from image-based methods to cell collection devices coupled with biomarkers. As Barrett's esophagus is a low prevalence disease, potential screening tests must be applied to an enriched population to reduce the false-positive rate and improve the cost-effectiveness of the program.Entities:
Keywords: Barrett's esophagus; New technologies; Screening
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29995243 PMCID: PMC6061133 DOI: 10.1007/s10620-018-5192-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dig Dis Sci ISSN: 0163-2116 Impact factor: 3.199
Synthesis of emerging screening criteria proposed over the past 40 years.
Adapted from Andermann et al. [9]
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| The screening program should respond to a recognized need |
| The objectives of screening should be defined at the outset |
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| There should be a defined target population |
| There should be scientific evidence of screening program effectiveness |
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| The program should integrate education, testing, clinical services and program management |
| There should be quality assurance, with mechanisms to minimize potential risks of screening |
| Program evaluation should be planned from the outset |
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| The program should ensure informed choice, confidentiality and respect for autonomy |
| The program should promote equity and access to screening for the entire target population |
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| The overall benefits of screening should outweigh the harm. |
Fig. 1A roadmap to show the stages of biomarker discovery to clinical implementation. The common stage at which biomarkers fail is highlighted as a translational gap
Fig. 2A numerical simulation to show how false-positive rates vary with prevalence. Regret (1-PPV) in colored lines is shown as a function of prevalence Π and specificity assuming sensitivity is held at constant values of 0.7 (a) and 0.9 (b)
Fig. 3Considerations for upscaling the Cytosponge™
High-throughput considerations and where each technology fits
| User acceptability | Operator expertise | Data analysis expertise | Suitability for high-throughput | Level of evidence to date | Cost-effectiveness | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard endoscopy | Low | High | High (image + pathology) | No | Standard of care for diagnosis-not widely implemented for screening | No |
| TLE | Moderate | High | High (image + pathology) | No | No RCT evidence in primary care | Modeling studies-promising |
| Capsule imaging | Moderate | High | High (image) unless automated | Medium | Preliminary in enriched population | Unknown |
| Cell collection device + biomarker | Moderate to high | Moderate | High (biomarker but binary and suitable for automation) | Yes | RCT in primary care ongoing (BEST3) | Promising |
| Blood-based biomarker | High | Low | Likely high depending on assay and algorithm automation | Yes | No RCT evidence in primary care | Unknown—likely cost-effective |
| Breath volatiles | High | Low | Likely high depending on assay and algorithm automation | Yes | Preliminary | Unknown—likely cost-effective |