Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The study looks at 2 hypotheses in 2 patient groups:

1. Are more experienced endoscopists better at detecting subtle lesions (polyps) on the lining of the colon (large bowel) than less experienced endoscopists?

2. Do existing and new techniques that can highlight lesions on the lining of the bowel improve endoscopists ability to spot them? This will be tested using video footage of endoscopies from 2 patient groups: those with a normal colon linig and those with colitis (bowel lining inflamation)


Clinical Trial Description

Colorectal cancer is the second commonest cause of cancer death. In a majority of cases it is preceeded by a precancerous lesion called an adenoma (commonly known as polyp). Patients with colitis are at specially high risk of colorectal cancer which is estimated to be 18% at 30 years of disease. Detection and removal of adenomas at colonoscopy has been shown to reduce the death rate from colorectal cancer. However, despite meticulous examination there is a "miss rate" for adenomas at colonoscopy with ranges from 6-15% in back-to-back colonoscopy studies. The nature of the polyps which as well as being pedunculated (cherry like) can be flat or depressed making them difficult to see and may also contribute to the "miss rate".

The factors that affect whether an endoscopist sees a polyp are not well studied. Polyp detection rates vary widely, even amongst experts. Endoscopist experience is assumed to improve polyp detection rates; however in one study the least experienced endoscopists found the most polyps. Techniques that highlight lesions advanced in recent years. Chromoendoscopy, spraying dye on the bowel lining, has been shown to help pick up more pre-cancerous polyp in one of three studies in normal patients and seems definitely helpful in colitis. Autofluorescence endoscopy and narrow band imaging use light filters to produce a false colour image of the bowel lining where polyps stand out. These techniques have been used with some success in the oesophagus and stomach but little work is available for the colon. High definition endoscopy produces very clear images and may also help in polyp detection.

This study aims to collect videos of colonoscopy when the colonoscope is being removed. This is the main time when polyps are looked for. Some videos will have subtle polyps. The study will re-examine and re-video these areas using one of the techniques which may make polyps stand out better. The aim is to get videos of polyps with and without each of the techniques to highlight the lesions in both normal colon and colitis. These videos will then be shown to endoscopist of differing experience to test if their ability to spot the lesions depends on experience and to see if techniques to make lesions stand out help them see lesions more easily. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Non-Randomized, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Diagnostic


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00237276
Study type Interventional
Source London North West Healthcare NHS Trust
Contact Brian Saunders, MD, FRCP
Email b.saunders@imperial.ac.uk
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date October 2005

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Active, not recruiting NCT05551052 - CRC Detection Reliable Assessment With Blood
Not yet recruiting NCT02754050 - Safety and Feasibility of the Tandem Snare Device N/A
Recruiting NCT02545699 - Prospective Trial to Compare ADR of G-EYE™ Colonoscopy With Standard Colonoscopy N/A
Completed NCT02617992 - Systematic Wide-Field EMR Scar Assessment and Therapy Audit
Completed NCT01688557 - Trial on Innovative Technologies in Colonoscopy N/A
Completed NCT01481337 - Endoscopic Mucosal Colonic Resection and Polypectomy Under Aspirin N/A
Completed NCT02470416 - Prevalence of Small Bowel Polyps in Patients With Sporadic Duodenal Adenomas N/A
Completed NCT00234650 - Adenoma Detection Rate With Position Change at Colonoscopy N/A
Recruiting NCT06096948 - Nexpowder to Prevent Delayed Bleeding After Endoscopic Resection N/A
Recruiting NCT05042947 - A New Ligation Using the Double-loop Clips Technique Versus Traditional Techniques in the Treatment of Large Wounds After Endoscopic Resection N/A
Completed NCT02937506 - Patient Satisfaction With Propofol for Out Patient Colonoscopy Phase 4
Active, not recruiting NCT01369758 - MyoSure Hysteroscopic Tissue Removal System Registry Study Phase 4
Completed NCT00979342 - Comparative Sedation Study of the MyoSure Hysteroscopic Tissue Removal System N/A
Completed NCT00553436 - Evaluation of an Endoscopic Suturing System for Tissue Apposition in Colonic Polypectomy N/A
Completed NCT00577083 - Cap-fitted Colonoscopy: a Randomized, Tandem Colonoscopy Study of Adenoma Miss Rates N/A
Recruiting NCT03868605 - Endoscopic Full Thickness Resection Versus Standard Therapy of the Colorectal Neoplasia N/A
Completed NCT01917513 - Prospective Trial to Compare the Clinical Efficiency of G-EYE™ HD Colonoscopy With Standard HD Colonoscopy N/A
Completed NCT01807169 - Recto Colonic Endoscopic Mucosal Resection and Polypectomy Under Clopidogrel Phase 4
Active, not recruiting NCT03708952 - Lifestyle and Dietary Pattern in Relation to Precursor Lesions of Colorectal Cancer and Cardiometabolic Diseases
Completed NCT03146052 - Comparison Between Asymmetric And Standard Split-Dose Regimen For Bowel Preparation N/A