| Literature DB >> 36188716 |
Conchubhair Winters1, Venkataraman Subramanian2, Pietro Valdastri3.
Abstract
Robotic colonoscopes could potentially provide a comfortable, less painful and safer alternative to standard colonoscopy. Recent exciting developments in this field are pushing the boundaries to what is possible in the future. This article provides a comprehensive review of the current work in robotic colonoscopes including self-propelled, steerable and disposable endoscopes that could be alternatives to standard colonoscopy. We discuss the advantages and disadvantages of these systems currently in development and highlight the technical readiness of each system to help the reader understand where and when such systems may be available for routine clinical use and get an idea of where and in which situation they can best be deployed. ©The Author(s) 2022. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Capsule endoscopy; Colonic polyp; Colonoscopy; Colorectal cancer; Endoscopy; Robot-enhanced procedures
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36188716 PMCID: PMC9516669 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v28.i35.5093
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastroenterol ISSN: 1007-9327 Impact factor: 5.374
Figure 1PubMed search for “robotic colonoscopy” showing the increasing number of papers over the last 3 decades[23].
The features of the ideal robotic colonoscope
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| 1 | Affordable |
| 2 | Acceptable to patients and endoscopists |
| 3 | More comfortable than conventional colonoscopy |
| 4 | Lower risk than conventional colonoscopy |
| 5 | Improved caecal intubation rate compared to conventional colonoscopy |
| 6 | Offer at least comparable mucosal visibility with the option of image enhancement (virtual chromoendoscopy) |
| 7 | Capable of taking biopsies and therapeutics such as polypectomy |
| 8 | Offer integration with artificial intelligence for polyp detection and characterisation |
| 9 | Ideally have autonomous features, such as self-navigation |
| 10 | Reduce the training time to achieve competence compared to conventional colonoscopy |
| 11 | Procedure times should be less than, but must not be significantly longer than, conventional colonoscopy |
| 12 | Have sustainability in mind in the manufacturing, reprocessing or disposal of the device |
Advantages and limitations of conventional colonoscopy alternatives
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| Conventional colonoscopy | Extensive knowledge base and expertise already available, diagnostic and therapeutic capabilities. Gold standard | Bowel cleansing required, painful for some (sedative and analgesics often required), prolonged training period required, risk of perforation due to forces required |
| CT colonography[ | Lower intensity bowel cleansing, shorter procedure, less discomfort (no sedation or analgesia needed), other intraabdominal pathology can be detected, lower risk of perforation, better patient tolerance | Low dose radiation used, lower sensitivity for small and flat polyps, no therapeutic capability, no direct mucosal visualisation, limited evidence of a benefit in CRC incidence or mortality |
| Wireless capsule colonoscopy | Minimally invasive, painless, better patient tolerability, low perforation risk | Aggressive bowel cleansing required, lower sensitivity than CC for polyps, no control of the capsule, no therapeutic capability, risk of capsule retention, limited battery life can cut out before complete colon visualisation |
CRC: Colorectal cancer; CC: Conventional colonoscopy; CT: Computed tomography.
Technology readiness levels as applicable to robotic colonoscopy[57,102,103]
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| 1 | Basic principles observed and reported | Published research on the core principals of the technology |
| 2 | Technology concept and/or application formulated | Moving from principals to applied research with potential applications speculated |
| 3 | Analytical and experimental proof of concept | Active research and development proving the concept within a laboratory setting. Benchtop testing |
| 4 | Component validation in laboratory environment | Proof of concept and safety in an |
| 5 | Component/system validation in a relevant environment |
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| 6 | High fidelity alpha protype demonstration in a relevant environment | Clinical trials assessing feasibility and safety in small number of humans |
| 7 | Beta prototype demonstrated in a relevant environment | Clinical safety and effectiveness trials. Determination of risks and adverse events. Final design validation |
| 8 | Completed system and qualified to relevant requirement/standards through testing and demonstration | FDA or equivalent approval |
| 9 | Actual system proven through successful operation | Device being marked with post-market studies proving real world operational capability |
Adopted from United States Department of Defense Technology Readiness Assessment (TRA) Guidance document, and the supporting evidence required from the United States Department of Defense Technology Readiness Assessment (TRA) Desk book. TRL: Technology readiness level; FDA: Food and Drug Administration.
Active flexible colonoscopy platforms with technology readiness level
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| Aer-O-Scope- | 2016: Human tandem study, 58 CRC screening patients. CIR: 98.2%. CIT: 11 min. 87.5% of polyps detected. No PREMs | CE marked and FDA approved. Balloon propulsion model no longer manufactured | 8 |
| ColonoSight- | 2008: Human study on 178 participants. CIR 90%. CIT: 11.2 min. No PREMs | FDA approved. No longer manufactured | 8 |
| Consis medical- | None available | No regulatory approvals | 3 |
| Endoculus- | 2020: | No regulatory approvals | 4 |
| ENDOO robotic colonoscope- | 2020: | No regulatory approvals | 4 |
| Endotics- | 2020 | CE marked and FDA approved. Commercially available in Europe and Japan | 8 |
| Invendoscope- | 2018: Human study on 40 participants using the SC210 model. CIR 95%. CIT 14.2 min. No PREMs on this study, but previous studies reported lower pain scores than CC | CE marked and FDA approved. No longer manufactured | 8 |
| Magnetic Flexible Endoscope- | 2020: | No regulatory approvals | 5 |
TRL: Technology readiness level; CIR: Caecal intubation rate; CIT: Caecal intubation time; FDA: Food and Drug Administration; CRC: Colorectal cancer; CC: Conventional colonoscopy; CE: Capsule endoscopy.
Figure 2Aer-O-Scope (GI View Ltd., Ramat Gan, Israel). A: Single use colonoscope scanner; B: Workstation. Citation: Images supplied directly by the manufacturer with email detailing permission to use attached as a text file.
Figure 3Invendoscope SC20 (Invendo Medical GmbH, Weinheim, Germany). A: Workstation; B: Drive unit; C: Deflectable tip; D: Working channel. Citation: Groth S, Rex DK, Rösch T, Hoepffner N. High cecal intubation rates with a new computer-assisted colonoscope: a feasibility study. Am J Gastroenterol 2011; 106: 1075-1080. Copyright© The Authors 2020. Published by Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License.
Figure 4Magnetic flexible endoscope (STORM lab, Leeds, United Kingdom and Nashville, TN, United States).
Figure 5Endoluminal assistant for surgical endoscopy (EASE; KARL STORZ/IRCAD, Strasbourg, France). A: Flexible tip with antagonistic tendons with tools attached; B: Slave unit. Citation: Permission for use and images provided directly by the lab who developed the device. Email confirmation attached as a text file.