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White-Light Endoscopy Is Adequate for Lynch Syndrome Surveillance in a Randomized and Noninferiority Study

Authors :
María López-Cerón
Antonio Z. Gimeno-García
Ariadna Sánchez
Sofía Parejo
Victoria Alvarez
Liseth Rivero-Sánchez
Beatriz Peñas
David Remedios
Joaquín Cubiella
Cristina Rodríguez de Miguel
Gerhard Jung
Patricia Calvo
Cristina Carretero
Alain Huerta
Maite Herraiz
Teresa Ocaña
Jorge López-Vicente
Leticia Moreira
Jordi Gordillo
Esteban Saperas
Maria Pellise
Antoni Castells
Rebeca Moreira
Cristina Alvarez-Urturi
Jesús Herrero
Sabela Carballal
Eduardo Albéniz
Josep Llach
Francesc Balaguer
Inmaculada Salces
Ignasi Puig
Marta García-Cougil
Coral Arnau-Collell
Enrique Rodríguez de Santiago
Source :
GASTROENTEROLOGY, r-IIB SANT PAU. Repositorio Institucional de Producción Científica del Instituto de Investigación Biomédica Sant Pau, instname
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background & Aims Dye-based pancolonic chromoendoscopy is recommended for colorectal cancer surveillance in patients with Lynch syndrome. However, there is scarce evidence to support its superiority to high-definition white-light endoscopy. We performed a prospective study assess whether in the hands of high detecting colonoscopists, high-definition, white-light endoscopy is noninferior to pancolonic chromoendoscopy for detection of adenomas in patients with Lynch syndrome. Methods We conducted a parallel controlled study, from July 2016 through January 2018 at 14 centers in Spain of adults with pathogenic germline variants in mismatch repair genes (60% women; mean age, 47 ± 14 years) under surveillance. Patients were randomly assigned to groups that underwent high-definition white-light endoscopy (n = 128) or pancolonic chromoendoscopy (n = 128) evaluations by 24 colonoscopists who specialized in detection of colorectal lesions in high-risk patients for colorectal cancer. Adenoma detection rates (defined as the proportion of patients with at least 1 adenoma) were compared between groups, with a noninferiority margin (relative difference) of 15%. Results We found an important overlap of confidence intervals (CIs) and no significant difference in adenoma detection rates by pancolonic chromoendoscopy (34.4%; 95% CI 26.4%–43.3%) vs white-light endoscopy (28.1%; 95% CI 21.1%–36.4%; P = .28). However, pancolonic chromoendoscopy detected serrated lesions in a significantly higher proportion of patients (37.5%; 95% CI 29.5–46.1) than white-light endoscopy (23.4%; 95% CI 16.9–31.4; P = .01). However, there were no significant differences between groups in proportions of patients found to have serrated lesions of 5 mm or larger (9.4% vs 7.0%; P = .49), of proximal location (11.7% vs 10.2%; P = .68), or sessile serrated lesions (3.9% vs 5.5%; P = .55), respectively. Total procedure and withdrawal times with pancolonic chromoendoscopy (30.7 ± 12.8 minutes and 18.3 ± 7.6 minutes, respectively) were significantly longer than with white-light endoscopy (22.4 ± 8.7 minutes and 13.5 ± 5.6 minutes; P Conclusions In a randomized parallel trial, we found that for Lynch syndrome surveillance, high-definition white-light endoscopy is not inferior to pancolonic chromoendoscopy if performed by experienced and dedicated endoscopists. ClinicalTrials.gov no: NCT02951390.

Details

ISSN :
15280012 and 00165085
Volume :
158
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gastroenterology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....185fc1f23fa4e46f5008246e7f44e4c2