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Clinical Trial Summary

To develop and endoscopic Raman spectroscopy probe for delivery down and channel in an endoscope to make near instant assessments of the condition of the oesophagus without the need for expensive and distressing tissue removal (biopsies).


Clinical Trial Description

The investigators have already shown that it is possible to tell the difference between healthy and diseased tissue in the laboratory by looking at the light emitted by tissue when illuminated with a low power laser. The investigators intend to use this technique, known as "Raman Spectroscopy" to tell if tissue in the oesophagus is cancerous, healthy or at some stage before full blown cancer, which is termed pre-cancer. It has been shown in the laboratory that this method will be at least as accurate as the conventional methods used now, but will provide the surgeon with instant results without the delay and cost of a laboratory analysis by pathologists. A miniature probe has been developed that slides through a channel in the endoscope (telescope) to the surface of the oesophagus to make near instant assessments of its condition without the need for expensive and distressing tissue removal (biopsies). This project plans to move this technique from the laboratory to the clinic by demonstrating that the method is safe and reliable for use in real patients. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03468634
Study type Interventional
Source University of Exeter
Contact Nicholas Stone, PhD
Phone +441392726531
Email rapide@exeter.ac.uk
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date September 21, 2023
Completion date July 2024

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