Endoscopy International Open (Jan 2022)

Diagnostic ability of linked color imaging in ultraslim endoscopy to identify neoplastic lesions in the upper gastrointestinal tract

  • Ken Haruma,
  • Mototsugu Kato,
  • Kenro Kawada,
  • Takahisa Murao,
  • Shoko Ono,
  • Mitsuhiko Suehiro,
  • Shinichiro Hori,
  • Fumisato Sasaki,
  • Tomoyuki Koike,
  • Shinji Kitamura,
  • Osamu Dohi,
  • Hiromitsu Kanzaki,
  • Nobuaki Yagi,
  • Keiichi Hashiguchi,
  • Shiro Oka,
  • Kazuhiro Katada,
  • Ryo Shimoda,
  • Kazuhiro Mizukami,
  • Toshihisa Takeuchi,
  • Shinichi Katsuki,
  • Momoko Tsuda,
  • Yuji Naito,
  • Tatsuyuki Kawano,
  • Keita Mori,
  • Hideki Ishikawa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1055/a-1723-2635
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 01
pp. E88 – E95

Abstract

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Background and study aims Linked color imaging (LCI) is a new image-enhancing technique that facilitates the differentiation of slight differences in mucosal color tone. We performed an exploratory analysis to evaluate the diagnostic capability of LCI in ultraslim endoscopy, using data from patients examined in the LCI-Further Improving Neoplasm Detection in upper gastrointestinal (LCI-FIND) trial, a large-scale, multicenter, randomized controlled trial that demonstrated the capability of LCI for detecting neoplastic lesions in the upper gastrointestinal tract. Patients and methods Data from the LCI-FIND prospective trial were used. In the LCI-FIND trial, 1502 patients with a history of gastrointestinal cancer were randomly assigned to two groups based on examination methods: white light imaging (WLI) followed by LCI (WLI group) and LCI followed by WLI (LCI group). The present exploratory analysis investigated the outcomes of patients who underwent ultraslim and standard endoscopies. Results Ultraslim endoscopes were used in 223 patients and standard endoscopes in 1279 patients. The primary endpoint of the LCI-FIND trial was the percentage of patients diagnosed with a neoplastic lesion using WLI or LCI. The corresponding percentage tended to be higher with LCI than with WLI among patients who underwent ultraslim endoscopy and among those who underwent standard endoscopy; the crude risk ratio was 2.21 [95 % confidence interval (CI): 1.06–4.67], and the adjusted odds ratio was 2.46 (95 % CI: 1.07–5.63). Conclusions Our exploratory analysis of data from the LCI-FIND trial showed that LCI is useful in identifying neoplastic lesions, when used in ultraslim endoscopy.