Gastrointestinal Endoscopy
Volume 62, Issue 4 , Pages 521-528, October 2005

A novel videoendoscopy system by using autofluorescence and reflectance imaging for diagnosis of esophagogastric cancers

Current affiliations: Departments of Gastrointestinal Oncology and Pathology, Osaka Medical Center for Cancer and Cardiovascular Diseases, Osaka, Japan

Received 24 November 2004; accepted 7 June 2005.

Osaka, Japan

Background

Image quality of the prior autofluorescence (AF) imaging systems, including the fiber-optic endoscope, was not feasible for general clinical use. The use of AF image alone resulted in low specificity. The objective of the study was to evaluate the resolution and the sensitivity of the novel videoendoscopy system by using AF and reflectance imaging (AFI) in the diagnosis of early esophagogastric cancers.

Methods

This was a case series study. The setting was a pretreatment examination at a cancer center. Five patients with superficial esophageal cancers (SEC) and 21 patients with 22 early gastric cancers (EGC) were included in the study. The extent of the tumors was diagnosed by white light (WL), AF and chromoendoscopic observations. The main outcome measurement was the diagnostic accuracy of each observation in relation to the histologic mapping as a criterion standard.

Results

Two of 5 SECs (40%) were correctly diagnosed in the WL image and all (100%) in the AF image as purple or magenta color in a green background. EGCs in atrophic mucosa were observed as purple or magenta areas in a green background, while diffuse-type EGCs in fundic mucosa were observed as green areas in a purple background. Of the 22 EGCs, diagnostic accuracy of WL, AF, and choromoendoscopic observations were 36%: 95% CI [16%, 56%], 68%: 95% CI [49%, 88%], and 91%: 95% CI [79%, 100%], respectively. AFI could reveal flat or isochromatic extensions that were not detected in the WL images. The limitations of the study were ulcerations or inflammation that caused overdiagnosis in the AF observation.

Conclusions

The resolution of the AFI at present is limited, but the image quality was acceptable. The current system of AFI does not equal to chromoendoscopy in sensitivity but has an advantage over standard WL videoendoscopy.

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 Poster presentation at Digestive Disease Week, May 15-20, 2004, New Orleans, Louisiana (Gastrointest Endosc 2004;59:AB147).This study was supported, in part, by the Grant-in-Aid for Cancer Research (14-18) from the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare.

PII: S0016-5107(05)02294-7

doi:10.1016/j.gie.2005.06.031

Gastrointestinal Endoscopy
Volume 62, Issue 4 , Pages 521-528, October 2005