| Literature DB >> 32423413 |
Junping Sha1, Jun Chen2, Xuguang Lv1, Shaoxin Liu1, Ruihong Chen3, Zhibing Zhang4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Colonoscopy is the reference standard for the detection of colorectal cancer but it is an invasive technique and has the risk of bowel perforation and bleeding. Unlike colonoscopy, sedation is not required in computed tomography colonography and requires additional reassurance endoscopy. The objectives of the study were to compare the diagnostic performance of computed tomography colonography against colonoscopy for a diagnosis of colorectal cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Colonoscopy; Colorectal cancer; Computed tomographic colonography; Surgical pathology; Suspicious polyps
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32423413 PMCID: PMC7236500 DOI: 10.1186/s12880-020-00446-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Imaging ISSN: 1471-2342 Impact factor: 1.930
Fig. 1Study flow chart. ø: Diameter
Fig. 2Lesion ulceration of male patients aged 51 years. a: Computed tomographic colonography, the white circle indicates lesion ulceration. b. Colonoscopy, the black circle indicates lesion ulceration
Fig. 352 years old female patient with colonic extramural invasion. a: Computed tomographic colonography, the white circle indicates colonic extramural invasion. b. Colonoscopy, black circle indicates colonic extramural invasion
Fig. 4Colon lesion shouldering of 53 years old female. a: Computed tomographic colonography, the white circle indicates lesion shouldering. b. Colonoscopy, the black circle indicates lesion shouldering
Demographic parameters and clinical conditions of diagnosed patients
| Parameters | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| Patients | 318 | |
| Age (years) | Minimum | 30 |
| Maximum | 75 | |
| Mean ± SD | 65.12 ± 7.28 | |
| Gender | Male | 135(42) |
| Female | 183(58) | |
| Ethnicity | Han Chinese | 292(92) |
| Mongolian | 23(7) | |
| Tibetan | 3(1) | |
| Symptoms | Abdominal pain | 201(63) |
| Rectal bleeding | 53(17) | |
| Change in bowel habit | 278(87) | |
| Anemia | 171(54) | |
| Weight loss | 151(48) | |
| Route of referral | Gastroenterology | 205(64) |
| Colorectal surgical clinic | 85(27) | |
| Geriatrics | 28(9) | |
Continuous data are presented as mean ± SD and categorical data are presented as frequency (percentage)
Performance of diagnostic methods
| Parameters | Surgical pathology | Computed tomographic colonography | Colonoscopy | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patients | 77 | 318 | * | 318 | * |
| Polyp ≥10 mm ø | 25(32) | 27(8) | 0.863 | 23(7) | 0.859 |
| Polyps < 10 mm ø but suspicious | 49(64) | 47(15) | 41(13) | ||
| Non suspicious and < 10 mm ø polyps | 3(4) | 239(75) ** | < 0.0001 | 247(78)** | < 0.0001 |
| Inconclusive results | 0(0) | 5(2) | 0.588 | 7(2) | 0.354 |
Data are presented as frequency (percentage)
*Respect to surgical pathology
Lesion ulceration, extramural invasion, and/ or lesion shouldering was considered as suspicious polyp
The Fischer exact test was used statistical analysis
A p < 0.05 was considered significant
**Significant difference with respect to surgical pathology
ø: Diameter
Accuracies of diagnostic methods
| Parameters | Computed tomographic colonography | Colonoscopy |
|---|---|---|
| For polyp ≥10 mm ø | 0.926 | 0.920 |
| For polyps < 10 mm ø but suspicious | 0.959 | 0.837 |
Lesion ulceration, extramural invasion, and/ or lesion shouldering was considered as suspicious polyp
ø: Diameter
Fig. 5Beneficial score analysis for the diagnosis of 10 mm in diameter or more sized polyps. ø: Diameter
Fig. 6Benefit score analysis for less than 10 mm in diameter but suspicious polyps. Lesion ulceration, extramural invasion, and/ or lesion shouldering was considered as a suspicious polyp. ø: Diameter
Fig. 7Cost-analysis of diagnosis methods for colorectal cancer diagnosis. Data are presented as mean ± SD, 318 patients were diagnosed for both modalities. Mann-Whitney U-test used for analysis. A p < 0.05 was considered significant. *Significant lower cost than colonoscopy