Gastritis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Optical Enhancement System ™ Plus Optical Magnification Utility in the Identification of Normal Gastric Mucosa, Helicobacter Pylori Associated Gastritis, and Gastric Atrophy
Endoscopy is a tool that has greatly influenced gastroenterological diagnosis. However,
conventional endoscopy is limited to detecting lesions on the basis of gross morphological
changes and therefore a certainly diagnosis depends on biopsy sampling of macroscopically
obvious endoscopic features, or blind biopsy sampling of normal appearing mucosa with the
risk of missed pathology and sampling errors.
Gastric cancer is the second most common cause of cancer related death. One of the main
roles of upper gastrointestinal endoscopy is to identify gastric cancer at an early stage.
The importance of identifying H. pylori infection is because it plays a very important role
in gastric carcinogenesis, progressing from chronic gastritis through atrophic gastritis,
intestinal metaplasia, dysplasia and finally cancer. The importance of recognition a
precancerous gastric lesion is because we can detect most tumors at an early stage and
improve the survival.
Most studies conclude that it is difficult to diagnose H. pylori related gastritis and
gastric atrophy on the basis of endoscopic findings. Histology is therefore currently
considered to be the gold standard for detecting H. pylori infection. The reliability of
detecting H. pylori infection histologically depends on the site, number, and size of
gastric biopsy specimens, as well as on expertise in staining and visualizing the bacteria.
Considerable error also occurs in identifying gastric atrophy using blind biopsy sampling,
and neither the original nor the revised version of the Sydney system reliably identifies
more than half the cases in patients with confirmed gastric atrophy.
Recently an image-enhanced endoscopic technology using a pre-processor band-limited light
called Optical Enhancement system (OE system™), was developed by HOYA Co. (Tokyo, Japan) and
is now equipped with the latest endoscopy system (Pentax Video Processor EPK-i7010; HOYA
Co.). This new technology combines digital signal processing in a similar way to I-scan and
optical filters that limit the spectral characteristics of the illumination light. Previous
I-scan technology uses white light alone as an illumination light and digital
post-processing of the reflection afterwards creates images yielding the virtual
chromoendoscopic image. Emission of white light alone causes a potential limitation for the
current I-scan technology to obtain higher contrast images of microvascular pattern on the
mucosal surface in combination with high magnification as shown by NBI with optical
magnification. The basic concept of OE is to overcome the darkness of NBI witch results in
less usefulness for detectability in wide-range observation in the gastrointestinal lumen.
The new innovated optical filters achieve higher overall transmittance by connecting the
peaks of the hemoglobin absorption spectrum (415 nm, 540 nm and 570 nm) creating a
continuous wavelength spectrum. There are two modes with different OE filters (Mode 1 and
Mode 2). Mode 1 is designed mainly to improve visualization of microvessels with a
sufficient amount of light, and Mode 2 is designed to improve contrast of white-light
observation by bringing the color tone of the overall image closer to that of natural color
(white color tone) with much more light than that of the Mode 1 filter.
In addition to this, new scopes have been developed which combines high definition images
with optical magnification called Magniview™. These scopes increase the image up to 136
times with a better quality of image than standard scopes without optical zoom. This allows
an optimal and much clear evaluation of the mucosa and superficial vascular aspects,
possibly identifying early suggestive signs of inflammation or lesions not seen before using
conventional videoendoscopy, high definition scopes with white light or digital
post-processor filters systems as I-Scan™.
Estimated enrollment: A total of 100 patients with functional dyspepsia will be include
(intervention group: 50 patients and control group: 50 patients)
Study design: This is an observational and analytical cross-section, population - based
survey study, with a prospective case collection, non randomized and double blind, performed
in a Tertiary Academic Center.
- Allocation: Non randomized, double blind
- Endpoint Classification: Efficacy
- Intervention Model: Non interventional
- Primary Purpose: Diagnosis
Setting: Ecuadorian Institute of Digestive Diseases (IECED), OmniHospital Academic Tertiary
Center. We will include patients from October 2015 to December 2015. Patients will be
recruited from the gastroenterology unit (IECED). The study protocol and consent form has
been approved by the Institutional Review Board (IRB) and will be conducted according to the
declaration of Helsinki. Patients will sign an informed consent.
Population selection, inclusion and exclusion criteria: All of the participants with
functional dyspepsia will be tested for Helicobacter Pylori (HP) using the stool antigen
test. After this phase we will have to groups of patients, dyspeptic HP (+) and dyspeptic HP
(-). The first group will be the intervention group and the dyspeptic HP (-) patients will
serve as control group. None the patients or the endoscopist will know which group each
patient belongs.
Functional dyspepsia will be considered according to the Rome III. Criteria. It will include
Epigastric pain Syndrome defined as located pain or burning in the upper abdomen, at least
once a week, intermittent, not generalized, not relieved by defecation and without criteria
of gall bladder or sphincter of Oddi pathology; and Postprandial distress Syndrome defined
as the presence of one or both conditions including nagging feeling of postprandial fullness
after normal volume meals, several times a week and early satiety that prevents the
completion of a regular meal, several times a week. The criteria must be present in the last
three months and have started at least 6 months before diagnosis.
Endoscopic technique: All the patients included in the protocol (intervention group and
control group) will be studied by upper endoscopy with Magniview™ scopes and EPK-i7010
processor (OE system™). The endoscopy images will be seen on a 27inch, flat panel, high
definition LCD monitor (Radiance™ ultra SC-WU27-G1520 model). The endoscopies will be
performed by three endoscopist trained on this new technology (all of them with more than 10
procedures).
Initially a complete (esophagus, stomach, duodenum) conventional white light upper endoscopy
will be performed with detailed observation of the whole stomach. After this the gastric
body will be evaluated with the OE System and Magniview.
The technique involves the use of a distal black rubber hood (OE-A58) at the tip of the
scope (EG-2990Zi) to fix the distance between the tip of the endoscope and the gastric
mucosa at 2mm. First the OE system™ will be used (mode 1 and 2), then the optical
magnification will be implemented through the actions of a button on the Magniview scope.
After reaching the maximum magnification level, the cup will contact to the gastric mucosa
and water will be instilled.
Any residue in the stomach will be removed using a water ejection pump. The evaluation of
the gastric mucosa will be performed in the gastric body instead of the antrum because in
the antrum the collecting venules lie in deeper layers and cannot be seen.
The endoscopic findings in the gastric body will be classified as the Anagnostopoulos GK et
al. classification into four types: type 1, honeycomb−type subepithelial capillary network
(SECN) with regular arrangement of collecting venules and regular, round pits; type 2,
honeycomb−type SECN with regular, round pits, but loss of collecting venules; type 3, loss
of normal SECN and collecting venules, with enlarged white pits surrounded by erythema; and
type 4, loss of normal SECN and round pits, with irregular arrangement of collecting
venules. Type 1 pattern for predicting normal gastric, types 2 and 3 patterns for predicting
a Helicobacter pylori infection and type 4 patterns for predicting gastric atrophy.
The gastric body will be photographically recorded, including images of normal mucosa or
gastric mucosal changes. Finally biopsies will be taken in both groups, using a regular
biopsy forceps; randomly biopsies following the Sydney protocol (two from the gastric body,
two from the antrum and one from the incisura angularis) and targeted biopsies from areas
with a type 2,3 or 4 pattern, to correlate them with the histological changes in H. pylori
gastritis and gastric atrophy. The diagnosis of positive H. pylori infection will be done to
all participants by direct visualization at histological examination and using a stool
antigen test for H pylori.
Interobserver and Intraobserver Agreement: A data set containing photographs of the gastric
lesions will be presented to three blinded endoscopists who will confirm or not the
findings. Inter and intra-observer reproducibility will be measured based on comparison of
still images between the three investigators. To evaluate the intra-observer agreement each
investigator will assess the images two times and the answers will be compared. To evaluate
the inter-observer agreement all answers between the three investigators will be compared.
Statistical analysis: Base line characteristics will be compared between case and control
group using Chi-square o Fisher Test for categorical variable, and for continuing variables,
the Mann-Whitney Test will be used. The sensitivity, specificity, and predictive values of
the endoscopic findings for normal gastric mucosa, H. pylori infection, and gastric atrophy
will be calculated. To examine inter and intra observer agreement, kappa values will be
calculated. A P value of less than 0.05 is considered to be statistically significant. All
the statistical analysis will be performed using SPSS software suite v.22.
Limitations: The protocol will be performed in only one center and the group selection is
not random
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Observational Model: Case Control, Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional
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