MedPath

Precision of Optical Diagnosis in Polyps Between 5-15 mm and Its Implications on Surveillance. A Prospective, Multicenter Study.

Completed
Conditions
Colonic Polyps
Colon Cancer
Serrated Adenoma
Colon Neoplasms
Registration Number
NCT04232176
Lead Sponsor
University Hospital Virgen de las Nieves
Brief Summary

This study evaluates the ability of endoscopists to perform a complete optical diagnosis of colorectal polyps between 5 and 15 mm, and the impact of the only endoscopic diagnosis on the follow-up program for those patients. This is a prospective study in which we compare the diagnosis regarding size and histology made by the endoscopist versus de pathologic diagnosis.

Detailed Description

Background: Optical diagnosis of colonic polyps is an attractive possibility and a common practice. However, recommendations and the main decision concerning patients' management still rely on histological diagnosis, with controversial results in previous studies, usually designed to analyze the accuracy of this diagnosis in the setting of a 'resect and discard' or 'diagnose and leave' strategy. However, little has been studied on this diagnosis on polyps of about 10 mm, the threshold for the consideration as a high risk adenoma, that need a 3 year colonoscopy, or, in case of a smaller adenoma, with a recommended revision in 5 years. Some studies have addressed the accuracy when estimating the polyp size, and others the histology by means of virtual or optical chromoendoscopy, but no one has studied both parameters, that are the two pillars in which a revision program for the patient is decided.

Hypothesis: Our main purpose is to determine the accuracy of the complete optical diagnosis as made by the endoscopist in the endoscopy room, in order to give recommendations immediately after the colonoscopy, with no need of further histological analyses.

Aims:

* To establish endoscopist accuracy, in different hospital settings, to predict size and histology of polyps between 5 and 15 mm and whether follow-up recommedations based on this diagnosis are accurate enough, when compared to the pathologic diagnosis.

* To evaluate accuracy of the optical size estimation by the endoscopist, with respect to the measurement after resection and by the pathologist (after formaline fixation).

* To analyze the rate of sessile serrated adenoma not diagnosed by the endoscopista on site.

* To determine the proportion of incomplete resection and complications with different resection techniques.

* To follow-up patients with high risk adenoma with the aim to establish the best follow-up schedule for those patients, and clarify this topic, still subjected to uncertainty.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
545
Inclusion Criteria
  • Age between 18-80 years
  • Colorectal polyps with an estimated size (endoscopist estimation) between 5 and 15 mm.
  • Consent to be included in the protocol.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Polyps sized <5 mm or >15 mm
  • Polyps that cannot be resected.
  • Polys that cannot be sent for pathologic study.
  • Peacemeal resection.
  • Polyposis syndromes with a previous histologic diagnosis.
  • Patients do not consent to participate in the study.

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Concordance of optical diagnosis with pathologic diagnosisImmediate after the polyps detection

Optical diagnosis accuracy (endoscopist) when compared to the Pathologic report

Precision in polyps sizing the pathologistImmediate after resection and within 10 days after polyp resection to allow pathologic diagnosis

Comparison of sizes after resection and after formaline and pathologic diagnosis

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Rate of polyps' recurrence at the end of the follow-up.5 years after the index resection

Polyps recurrence after long-term follow up for advanced adenoma (Rate)

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

"Virgen de las Nieves" University Hospital

🇪🇸

Granada, Spain

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath