Wu Jiandi, Zhang Qingqing, Li Xueyan, Bai Tao, Hou Xiaohua, Li Gangping, Song Jun
Department of Gastroenterology, Union Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, China .
Clin Transl Gastroenterol. 2025 Feb 1;16(2):e00805. doi: 10.14309/ctg.0000000000000805.
The detection rate of proximal sessile serrated lesion (PSSLDR) is linked to the incidence and mortality of colorectal cancer. However, research on second forward view (SFV) examinations for PSSLDR remains limited. This first randomized controlled trial assessed the impact of the proximal SFV on the PSSLDR.
Patients were randomized into 2 groups during proximal colonoscopy: standard colonoscopy (SC) and SFV. The SC group underwent a standard examination, whereas the SFV group underwent a second examination of the proximal colon (cecum to splenic flexure). The primary outcome was PSSLDR, with secondary outcomes, including the proximal polyp detection rate (PPDR), proximal adenoma detection rate (PADR), and lesion miss rate, compared between the 2 groups.
Among 246 patients (SC = 124; SFV = 122), SFV significantly improved the PSSLDR by 7.4% compared with SC (9.8% vs 2.4%, P = 0.017). SFV increased the PPDR by 20.2% (55.7% vs 35.5%, P = 0.002) and PADR by 12.7% (37.7% vs 25%, P = 0.039). Multivariate analysis revealed that sessile serrated lesions (odds ratio [OR] = 7.70, 95% confidence interval [CI] [1.58, 37.59]), inflammatory polyps (OR = 4.24, 95% CI [1.73, 10.39]), and lesion size (OR = 0.76, 95% CI [0.60, 0.96]) were associated with proximal missed lesions. The overall polyp miss rate was 52.9%, with miss rates of 61.0% for polyps <5 mm, 80% for sessile serrated lesions, and 42.2% for adenomas. Furthermore, 12.3% of patients experienced changes in surveillance intervals from SFV examination.
SFV examination of the proximal colon significantly improved the PSSLDR by 7.4%, PPDR by 20.2%, and PADR by 12.7%, while shortening the detection interval by 12.3%, making it a valuable and cost-effective addition to routine colonoscopy.
近端无蒂锯齿状病变的检出率(PSSLDR)与结直肠癌的发病率和死亡率相关。然而,关于用于PSSLDR的第二次前瞻性观察(SFV)检查的研究仍然有限。这项首个随机对照试验评估了近端SFV对PSSLDR的影响。
在近端结肠镜检查期间,患者被随机分为两组:标准结肠镜检查(SC)组和SFV组。SC组进行标准检查,而SFV组对近端结肠(盲肠至脾曲)进行第二次检查。主要结局是PSSLDR,比较两组的次要结局,包括近端息肉检出率(PPDR)、近端腺瘤检出率(PADR)和病变漏诊率。
在246例患者中(SC组 = 124例;SFV组 = 122例),与SC组相比,SFV组使PSSLDR显著提高了7.4%(9.8%对2.4%,P = 0.017)。SFV组使PPDR提高了20.2%(55.7%对35.5%,P = 0.002),使PADR提高了12.7%(37.7%对25%,P = 0.039)。多因素分析显示,无蒂锯齿状病变(优势比[OR]=7.70,95%置信区间[CI][1.58, 37.59])、炎性息肉(OR = 4.24,95%CI[1.73, 10.39])和病变大小(OR = 0.76,95%CI[0.60, 0.96])与近端漏诊病变相关。息肉总体漏诊率为52.9%,<5 mm息肉的漏诊率为61.0%,无蒂锯齿状病变的漏诊率为80%,腺瘤的漏诊率为42.2%。此外,12.3%的患者因SFV检查而改变了监测间隔。
对近端结肠进行SFV检查使PSSLDR显著提高了7.4%,PPDR提高了20.2%,PADR提高了12.7%,同时使检测间隔缩短了12.3%,使其成为常规结肠镜检查中一项有价值且具有成本效益的补充检查。