| Literature DB >> 30078307 |
Sung Noh Hong1, Sun-Hyung Kang2, Hyun Joo Jang3, Michael B Wallace4.
Abstract
Colon capsule endoscopy (CCE) is a relatively new diagnostic procedure for patients with suspected colonic diseases. This convenient,noninvasive method enables the physician to explore the entire colon without significant discomfort to the patient. However, while CCEcan be performed painlessly without bowel air insufflation, the need for vigorous bowel preparation and other technical limitationsexist. Due to such limitations, CCE has not replaced conventional colonoscopy. In this review, we discuss historical and recentadvances in CCE including technical issues, ideal bowel preparation, indications and contraindications and highlight further technicaladvancements and clinical studies which are needed to develop CCE as a potential diagnostic tool.Entities:
Keywords: Capsule endoscopy; Colonoscopy; Colon
Year: 2018 PMID: 30078307 PMCID: PMC6078933 DOI: 10.5946/ce.2018.121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Endosc ISSN: 2234-2400
Fig. 1.Colon capsule endoscopy (Given Imaging Ltd., Yoqneam, Israel). (A) Upper panel represents the first generation colon capsule endoscopy (CCE-1) and the lower portion is the second generation colon capsule endoscopy (CCE-2). CCE-2 is slightly bigger than CCE-1. (B) Acetaminophen 650 mg (Tyrenol SR®) and CCE-2. (C) CCE-2 measures 11.6×31.5 mm, equal to 1 and 1/2 of the last joint of finger in an adult male.
Most Extensively Tested Preparation Regimen for Colon Capsule Endoscopy.[10,11] Other Regimens Described in our Text Were Mostly Modified from this Regimen
| Day | Time | Preparation |
|---|---|---|
| -1 | All day | Liquid diet only |
| 6:00–9:00 PM | 3 L PEG | |
| 0 (exam day) | 6:00–7:00 AM | 1 L PEG |
| 7:45 AM | Domperidone (20 mg) | |
| 8:00 AM | Colon capsule ingestion | |
| 10:00 AM | 45 mL NaP + 1 L water (first booster) | |
| 02:00 PM | 30 mL NaP + 1 L water (second booster) | |
| 4:30 PM | 10 mg Bisacodyl (suppository) | |
First booster was administered after capsule exit from stomach. PEG, polyethylene glycol; NaP, sodium-phosphate.
Fig. 2.Examples of endoscopic pictures captured by colon capsule endoscopy (CCE). (A) Normal colonic mucosa. (B) Colorectal neoplasm: 17 mm-sized polyp was found at transverse colon during screening CCE (Courtesy of Professor Jae Jun Park from Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea).
Sensitivity and Specificity of Colon Capsule Endoscopy for Polyp Detection
| Study | Type of colon capsule | No. of patients | Outcome measurement | Sensitivity (%) | Specificity (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eliakim et al. (2006) [ | CCE-1 | 84 | Polyps ≥ 6 mm in size or ≥3 in number, Per-patient analysis | 50 | 83 |
| Schoofs et al. (2006) [ | CCE-1 | 36 | Polyps ≥ 6 mm in size or ≥3 in number, Per-patient analysis | 77 | 70 |
| Van Gossum et al. (2009) [ | CCE-1 | 320 | Polyp ≥6 mm, Per-patient analysis | 64 | 84 |
| Advanced adenoma ≥6 mm, Per-patient analysis | 73 | 79 | |||
| Polyp ≥6 mm, Per-patient analysis | 74 | 74 | |||
| Eliakim et al. (2009) [ | CCE-2 | 98 | Any polyp, Per-patient analysis | 44 | 53 |
| Polyp ≥6 mm, Per-patient analysis | 89 | 76 | |||
| Polyp ≥10 mm, Per-patient analysis | 88 | 89 | |||
| Gay et al. (2010) [ | CCE-1 | 126 | Colonoscopy results | 87.5 | 76 |
| Sacher-Huvelin et al. (2010) [ | CCE-1 | 545 | Polyp ≥6 mm, Per-patient analysis | 39 | 88 |
| Spada et al. (2011) [ | CCE-2 | 109 | Polyp ≥6 mm, Per-patient analysis | 84 | 64 |
| Rondonotti et al. (2014) [ | CCE-2 | 50 | Polyp ≥6 mm, Per-patient analysis, | 88.2 | 87.8 |
| Rex et al. (2015) [ | CCE-2 | 695 | Polyp ≥6 mm, Per-patient analysis | 81 | 93 |
| Polyp ≥10 mm, Per-patient analysis | 80 | 97 | |||
| Saito et al. (2015) [ | CCE-2 | 66 | Polyp ≥6 mm or any other lesion warranting endoscopic or surgical treatment | ||
| Per-patient analysis | 94.0 | - | |||
| Per-polyp analysis | 86.6 | - | |||
| Brechmann et al. (2016) [ | CCE-1 | 50 | Any polyps, Per-polyp analysis | 65 | 76 |
| Igawa et al. (2017) [ | CCE-2 | 30 | Laterally spreading tumors Per-polyp analysis | 81 | 100 |
| Alvarez-Urturi et al. (2017) [ | CCE-1 | 53 | Advanced adenomas, Per-polyp analysis | 100 | 98 |
| Any polyp, Per-patient analysis | 87 | 97 | |||
| Ota et al. (2017) [ | CCE-2 | 21 | Advanced colorectal cancer | ||
| Per-patient analysis | 85 | - | |||
| Per-polyp analysis | 81 | - | |||
| Parodi et al. (2018) [ | CCE-2 | 177 | Any polyp ≥6 mm, Per-patient analysis | 91 | 95 |
| Any polyp ≥10 mm, Per-patient analysis | 89 | 95 |
CCE-1, first generation colon capsule endoscopy; CCE-2, second generation colon capsule endoscopy.
Outcome of Colon Capsule Endoscopy Compared with Ileo-Colonoscopy in Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
| Study | Type of colon capsule | No. of patients | Outcome measurement | Results of CCE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ulcerative colitis | ||||
| Sung et al. (2012) [ | CCE-1 | 96 | Colonic inflammation (defined as the presence of ulcers, erythema, erosions, edema, exudates in mucosa) | Sensitivity, 89% (95% CI, 80–95); |
| Specificity, 75% (95% CI, 51–90); | ||||
| PPV, 93% (95% CI, 84–97); | ||||
| NPV, 65% (95% CI, 43–83) | ||||
| Meister et al. (2013) [ | CCE-1 | 13 | Modified Rachmilewitz score | Colonoscopy group: 7.3±2.9 |
| CCE group: 4.8±3.4 | ||||
| Ye et al. (2013) [ | CCE-1 | 26 | Extent of mucosal damage, inflammatory lesions | Correlation: severity (κ=0.751, |
| Hosoe et al. (2013) [ | CCE-2 | 40 | Matts score | Strong correlation (average rho = 0.797) |
| Oliva et al. (2014) [ | CCE-2 | 30 (pediatric ulcerative colitis) | Modified Matts score | Sensitivity, 96% (95% CI, 79–99); |
| Specificity, 100% (95% CI, 85–100); | ||||
| PPV, 100% (95% CI, 85–100); | ||||
| NPV, 85% (95% CI, 49–97) | ||||
| Shi et al. (2017) [ | CCE-2 | 108 | Mayo endoscopic subscore, UCEIS | Per-patient analysis: ICC for Mayo endoscopic subscore, 0.69 (95% CI, 0.46–0.81), ICC for UCEIS, 0.64 (95% CI, 0.38–0.78) |
| Crohn’s disease | ||||
| D’Haens et al. (2015) [ | CCE-2 | 40 | CDEIS | ICC of CDEIS, 0.65 (95% CI, 0.43–0.80) |
| Oliva et al. (2016) [ | CCE-2 | 38 | Active inflammation: colon, CDEIS >3; small bowel, Lew-is score ≥135) | Colon: sensitivity, 89%, specificity, 100%; PPV, 100%; NPV, 91%, Small bowel: sensitivity, 90%, specificity, 94%, PPV, 95%; NPV, 90%, entire GI tract: sensitivity, 89%, specificity, 92%, PPV, 96%; NPV, 79% |
| Niv et al. (2018) [ | CCE-2 | 10 | Capsule endoscopy Crohn’s disease activity Index | Kendall’s coefficients for the small bowel (0.85, |
| Leighton et al. (2017) [ | SBC | 66 | Lesions indicative of active Crohn’s disease (aphthous ulcers, ulcers other than aphthous-type, bleeding, or inflammatory stricture) | Per-patients analysis for diagnostic yield: SBC, 83.3% vs. ileo-colonoscopy, 69.7%; active lesions were detected in both ( |
CCE-1, first generation colon capsule endoscopy; CCE-2, second generation colon capsule endoscopy; CI, confidence interval; PPV, positive predictive value; NPV, negative predictive value; ICC, intraclass correlation coefficient; UCEIS, ulcerative colitis endoscopic index of severity; CDEIS, Crohn’s disease endoscopic index of severity; GI, gastrointestinal; SBC, small-bowel colon capsule.