View clinical trials related to Polyps.
Filter by:The investigators hypothesize that the clinical implementation of a deep learning AI system is an optimal tool to monitor, audit and improve the detection and classification of polyps and other anatomical landmarks during colonoscopy. The objectives of this study are to generate preliminary data to evaluate the effectiveness of AI-assisted colonoscopy on: a) the rate of detection of adenomas; b) the automatic detection of the anatomical landmarks (i.e., ileocecal valve and appendiceal orifice).
The goal of this study is to examine the mechanism of action of omalizumab in ex vivo tissue culture of whole human nasal polyps from patients with chronic rhino sinusitis with nasal polyposis (CRSwNP), such that specific molecular markers of inflammation can be identified.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the impact of implementing an integrated clinical care pathway for the diagnosis, referral, evaluation and treatment of large complex colorectal polyps on clinical outcomes
Colorectal cancer is the second most common cancer in Canada. Colonoscopy and removal of precancerous polyps (polypectomy) reduces the incidence and mortality associated with colorectal cancer. However, polypectomy is associated with adverse events. Post-polypectomy bleeding has a significant impact on the life of the patient as it can require hospitalization, transfusions, repeat colonoscopy and rarely death. It is also a substantial cost to the health care system. There currently is no standard of care to prevent bleeding after polypectomy. Tranexamic acid reduces fibrinolysis by slowing down the conversion of plasminogen to plasmin which may prevent bleeding. Although this medication is used extensively for other purposes, it has not been studied before to prevent post-polypectomy bleeding. This pilot study will examine factors involved in the feasibility of conducting a large-scale randomized controlled trial (RCT). This pilot study will include 25 consecutive patients who are treated with tranexamic acid after endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR) of large non-pedunculated colorectal polyps (LNPCP's) to prevent PPDB.
EndoVigilant software device augments existing colonoscopy procedure video in real-time by highlighting colon polyps and mucosal abnormalities. It is intended to assist gastroenterologists in detection of adenomas and serrated polyps. The device is an adjunctive tool and is not intended to replace physicians' decision making related to detection, diagnosis or treatment. This study with an adaptive design measures the clinical benefit (increase in detection of adenomatous and serrated polyps) and increased risk (increased extraction of non-adenomas) during standard colonoscopy procedures when EndoVigilant software device is used.
The focus of the study is to evaluate impact of submucosal injection of EverLift in achieving complete resection during polypectomy of polyps 4-9mm during colonoscopy.
The focus of the study is to evaluate impact of cold forcep and cold snare in achieving complete resection during polypectomy of polyps <=3mm during colonoscopy.
Benign epithelial gastric polyps are benign raised lesions that originate from the gastric mucosa or submucosa and protrude from the gastric cavity with a wide base or a pedicle.The diagnosis and treatment of benign epithelial gastric polyps are currently controversial. There is still a lack of clinical research evidence especially for the malignant tendency and related treatments of gastric polyps. Many doctors have ambiguous understanding of benign epithelial gastric polyps and their endoscopic management is still in a"one size fits all"mode in China, which greatly wastes medical resources and increases the medical risks of patients, So it is imminent to formulate management practices for the diagnosis and treatment of gastric polyps. Therefore, a full understanding of the clinical characteristics, endoscopic characteristics and long-term follow-up trends of benign epithelial gastric polyps is of great significance for clinicians to formulate reasonable treatment and follow-up plans. This study is a prospective, large-sample observational cohort study. It is planned to include 200 patients with biopsy confirmed benign epithelial gastric polyps participating in this study from September 10, 2020 to December 31, 2021 and followed up for 18 months. The main research endpoint is the correlation between size and pathological type of benign epithelial gastric polyps and polyps development. The secondary research endpoint is the correlation between type of benign epithelial gastric polyps and Helicobacter pylori infection. The research results will help provide long-term follow-up data for benign epithelial gastric polyps of different pathological types, thereby providing first-hand evidence-based medical data for formulating gastric polyp management guidelines, helping to efficiently screen high-risk groups and guiding their examination, treatment and long-term follow-up to achieve early detection and early treatment of gastric cancer, thereby reducing the mortality rate.
The primary objective is to determine sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value and negative predictive value of a bi-target stool DNA testing (the methylation status of SDC2 and SFRP2) for colorectal cancer and advanced precancerous neoplasm(including advanced adenoma and advanced serrated lesions) screening, using colonoscopy as the reference method. Lesions will be confirmed as malignant or precancerous by histopathologic examination. The secondary objective is to compare the performance of the bi-target stool DNA testing to a commercially available fecal immunochemical test (FIT) assay, both with respect to cancer and advanced precancerous neoplasm. Lesions will be confirmed as malignant or precancerous by colonoscopy and histopathologic examination.
Colorectal carcinoma (CRC) is the third most common cancer in male and female worldwide. In India, it is the fourth most common cause of cancer in males and third most common cancer in female. Age, smoking, colonic adenomatous polyp, family history are traditional risk factor for CRC. The vast majority of CRC results from malignant transformation from adenoma, which is called as adenoma carcinoma sequence. These adenomatous polyps grows slowly over many years and malignant transformation eventually occurs over 10 years. So, the early detection and removal of polyp at early stage should benefit in preventing CRC.