Colorectal Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
Does Inspection During Insertion Improve Adenoma Yields During Colonoscopy?
Colonoscopy is not a perfect test. It misses a substantial number of neoplastic lesions and has some risk of missing cancer. Nearly all work on detection during colonoscopy has focused on the withdrawal phase of the examination. This randomized, controlled trial will compare the additional effect on the rate of adenoma detection of mucosal inspection during colonoscope insertion, with inspection during instrument withdrawal, in patients undergoing colonoscopy for colorectal cancer screening or surveillance.
Background: Colonoscopy is not a perfect test. It misses a substantial number of neoplastic
lesions and has some risk of missing cancer. Nearly all work on detection during colonoscopy
has focused on the withdrawal phase of the examination. Thus, colonoscopy is typically
performed by rapidly passing the instrument through the loops and bends of the colon in order
to reach the tip of the cecum, and then performing a slow withdrawal in which the tip of the
instrument is systematically deflected, and the mucosa is careful cleaned and suctioned, to
expose all of the colonic mucosa for viewing.
Many experienced colonoscopists recognize that small polyps seen incidentally but not removed
during insertion are sometimes quite difficult to find during withdrawal. The reason for this
observation is probably because the colon is in a very different anatomical conformation
during endoscope insertion and withdrawal. During insertion, the colon is in its natural
conformation in which the sigmoid and transverse colon has several sharp bends or flexures,
and the overall length has not yet been shortened. In this phase, the colon is often
significantly stretched because of the formation of loops and bends in the colonoscope. This
greatly affects the conformation of the colonic wall visualized proximal to the instrument
tip. During withdrawal, the colon is shortened and pleated over the colonoscope, with
successive regions of the colon being inspected as they slip off the end of the instrument.
Thus, segments of visualized colon are often much straighter during withdrawal than during
insertion. The insertion and withdrawal phases, therefore, expose somewhat different sections
of the mucosal surface to the colonoscope and inspection on insertion and withdrawal are,
quite possibly, complementary.
Aims: This randomized, controlled trial will compare the additional effect on the rate of
adenoma detection of mucosal inspection during colonoscope insertion, with inspection during
instrument withdrawal, in patients undergoing colonoscopy for colorectal cancer screening or
surveillance.
Study procedure: In this study, we plan to investigate whether a specified interval of
inspection during insertion can increase overall adenoma detection. We will conduct a
randomized controlled trial, in which patients will be randomized to have all of the
inspection performed during the withdrawal phase (as is usual care) versus having several
minutes of examination specifically devoted to inspection during insertion.
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