Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05220345

Synergistic Effect of G-Eye Balloon for Behind the Folds Visualization With CADe (Discovery System) on Adenoma Detection Rate.

Synergistic Effect of G-Eye Balloon for Behind the Folds Visualization With Artificial Intelligence Assisted Polyp Detection (Discovery System) on Adenoma Detection Rate. 'Discovery III Study'

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
196 (actual)
Sponsor
Radboud University Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Colonoscopy is the gold standard for colorectal screening. The diagnostic accuracy of colonoscopy highly depends on the quality of inspection of the colon during the procedure. To increase detection new polyp detection systems based on artificial intelligence (AI) have been developed. However, these systems still depend on the ability of the endoscopist to adequately visualize the complete colonic mucosa, especially to detect smaller and more subtle lesions, or lesions hidden behind folds in the colon. With this study we want to combine a device to flatten the folds in the colon combined with an artificial intelligence system to further improve the detection rate of lesions during colonoscopy.

Detailed description

Rationale: Colonoscopy is the gold standard for CRC screening. The adenoma detection rate (ADR) is the most important quality parameter for colonoscopy, because of its inverse association with the risk of interval CRC. Yet, the adenoma miss rate (AMR) in conventional colonoscopy is reported in meta-analyses to vary between 22-26%. The diagnostic accuracy of colonoscopy highly depends on the quality of inspection of the colonic mucosa during the procedure. To increase the adenoma detection rate (ADR), new polyp/adenoma detection systems based on artificial intelligence (AI) have been developed, i.e., computer assisted detection (CADe). However, these systems still depend on the ability of the endoscopist to adequately visualize the complete colonic mucosa, especially to detect smaller and more subtle lesions. Therefore, we hypothesize that ADR can further be improved by combining a CADe system, the Discovery system, with a behind the fold (BTF) visualization technique, the G-Eye. Study design: International multicenter prospective interventional cohort, compared with a cohort from the Discovery II study (NL73127.091.20, trial code NL9135). All subjects will be undergoing colonoscopy with a combined BFT and CADe assisted approach. Outcomes will be corrected for confounders using regression modeling. Study population: 194 Adult patients (\>18 years) from 3 hospitals, scheduled for diagnostic, screening (non-iFOBT based), or surveillance colonoscopy. Exclusion criteria: inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), known polyp or tumor upon referral, therapeutic procedure (e.g. endoscopic mucosal resection), prior surgical resection of any portion of the colon, American Society of Anesthesiologists score of ≥3, Inadequately corrected anticoagulation disorders or anticoagulation medication use, inability to provide informed consent. Main study endpoints: The primary objective of the present study is to compare ADR between CADe assisted and a combined BTF/CADe assisted colonoscopy. Secondary objectives include advanced neoplasia rate (including advanced adenomas and/or CRC), polyp detection rate, size and histopathology, mean number of polyps per patient, procedure times, bowel cleaning levels, adverse events, inter-operator variability. Nature and extent of the burden and risks associated with participation, benefit and group relatedness: Eligible patients who are scheduled for surveillance colonoscopy will undergo one BFT and CADe assisted colonoscopy. There will be no burden for participants regarding the colonoscopy procedure. Colonoscopy is a commonly performed procedure, and the overall serious adverse event rate is low with an estimated risk 2.8 per 1000 colonoscopies. The risk of experiencing a (serious) adverse event with G-Eye and Discovery guided colonoscopy is believed to be equivalent to conventional colonoscopy. The benefit for patients is a higher likelihood of lesion detection during colonoscopy.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEcolonoscopy assisted by both balloon-Behind The Folds visualizing and Computer assisted detection (CADe)All participants will be subjected to a colonoscopy procedure, assisted by both G-eye balloon and the Discovery CADe system. Standard of care regarding the colonoscopy procedure will be applied to all study subjects. Any lesions detected during the procedure will be removed directly

Timeline

Start date
2022-05-12
Primary completion
2024-08-26
Completion
2024-09-26
First posted
2022-02-02
Last updated
2025-08-15

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Netherlands

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05220345. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.