AI Article Synopsis

  • Gastric intestinal metaplasia (GIM) is a precancerous condition of the stomach that can be diagnosed using various endoscopic techniques, with traditional white-light endoscopy (WLE) and acetic-acid chromoendoscopy being commonly used.
  • A study involving 156 patients compared the effectiveness of WLE, ME-AAC (acetic-acid chromoendoscopy), and a new method called ME-OE (optical-enhanced magnifying endoscopy) in identifying GIM, using histopathological findings as a standard.
  • Results showed that ME-OE had the highest accuracy (91.7%), outperformed both ME-AAC and WLE, required less time for diagnosis, and demonstrated

Article Abstract

Background: Gastric intestinal metaplasia (GIM) is a precancerous lesion of the stomach, which severely affects human life and health. Currently, a variety of endoscopic techniques are used to screen/evaluate GIM. Traditional white-light endoscopy (WLE) and acetic-acid chromoendoscopy combined with magnifying endoscopy (ME-AAC) are the interventions of choice due to their diagnostic efficacy for GIM. Optical-enhanced magnifying endoscopy (ME-OE) is a new virtual chromoendoscopy technique to identify GIM, which combines bandwidth-limited light and image enhancement processing technology to enhance the detection of mucosal and vascular details. We hypothesized that ME-OE is superior to WLE and ME-AAC in the evaluation of GIM.

Aim: To directly compare the diagnostic value of WLE, ME-AAC, and ME-OE for detection of GIM.

Methods: A total of 156 patients were subjected to consecutive upper gastrointestinal endoscopy examinations using WLE, ME-AAC, and ME-OE. Histopathological findings were utilized as the reference standard. Accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of the three endoscopy methods in the diagnosis of GIM were evaluated. Moreover, the time to diagnosis with ME-AAC and ME-OE was analyzed. Two experts and two non-experts evaluated the GIM images diagnosed using ME-OE, and diagnostic accuracy and intra- and inter-observer agreement were analyzed.

Results: GIM was detected in 68 of 156 patients (43.6%). The accuracy of ME-OE was highest (91.7%), followed by ME-AAC (86.5%), while that of WLE (51.9%) was lowest. Per-site analysis showed that the overall diagnostic accuracy of ME-OE was higher than that of ME-AAC ( = 0.011) and WLE ( < 0.001). The average diagnosis time was lower in ME-OE than in ME-AAC (64 ± 7 s 151 ± 30 s, < 0.001). Finally, the inter-observer agreement was strong for both experts ( = 0.862) and non-experts ( = 0.800). The internal consistency was strong for experts ( = 0.713, = 0.724) and moderate for non-experts ( = 0.667, = 0.598).

Conclusion: For endoscopists, especially experienced endoscopists, ME-OE is an efficient, convenient, and time-saving endoscopic technique that should be used for the diagnosis of GIM.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8180203PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.12998/wjcc.v9.i16.3895DOI Listing

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