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Journal ArticleDOI

West meets East: preliminary results of narrow band imaging with optical magnification in the diagnosis of colorectal lesions: a multicenter Australian study using the modified Sano's classification.

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TLDR
Narrow band imaging with optical magnification (NBI‐Z) enables mucosal morphology to be assessed in real time by using light with narrowed band width and magnification of up to 115×.
Abstract
Introduction: Narrow band imaging with optical magnification (NBI-Z) enables mucosal morphology to be assessed in real time by using light with narrowed band width and magnification of up to 115×. Methods:  Colorectal lesions detected were assessed with NBI-Z. Histology was predicted using the modified Sano's classification based on capillary network patterns (cn); type I: absent cn (hyperplastic polyp), type II: cn present, surrounding mucosal glands (adenoma), type IIIa: high density cn with tortuosity and lack of uniformity (intramucosal cancer) and type IIIb: nearly avascular cn (invasive cancer). Each lesion was also graded with a confidence level (low/high). High-definition videos (mean 28.2 s; range 12–55) of each lesion assessed with NBI-Z were then taken. This was followed by polypectomy, endoscopic or surgical resection. NBI-Z diagnosis was compared with the final histopathology. To test for interobserver agreement, an endoscopist blinded to the video acquisition process/histology was invited to grade the videos. Results:  A total of 50 lesions (2 assessors: 100 studies), with an average size of 8.4 mm (range 3–30), in 32 patients were assessed. Twenty were hyperplastic, 25 adenomas, 2 intramucosal and 3 invasive cancers of which 19 were located in the right and 31 in the left colon. The overall accuracy of NBI-Z in predicting histology was 90%, which increased to 95% (88/93) when lesions were predicted with high confidence. The sensitivity (Sn), specificity (Sp), positive (PPV) and negative predictive values (NPV) in differentiating neoplastic from non-neoplastic lesions with high confidence were 98%, 89%, 93% and 97%, respectively, while the Sn, Sp, PPV and NPV in predicting endoscopic resectability (type II, IIIa vs type I, IIIb) was 100%, 90%, 93% and 100%, respectively. The interobserver agreement between both assessors (κ value) was substantial at 0.89. Conclusions:  Using confidence levels, NBI-Z permits prediction of colorectal neoplasia with high accuracies and might allow prompt decisions to be made if a lesion should be left in situ, resected and discarded or biopsied. This approach might lead to substantial time and cost savings and could potentially reduce complications associated with polypectomy and endoscopic resections.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Narrow band imaging to differentiate neoplastic and non-neoplastic colorectal polyps in real time: a meta-analysis of diagnostic operating characteristics

TL;DR: NBI diagnosis of colorectal polyps is highly accurate—the area under the HSROC curve exceeds 0.90 and shows high potential for real-time endoscopic diagnosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diagnostic performance of narrowed spectrum endoscopy, autofluorescence imaging, and confocal laser endomicroscopy for optical diagnosis of colonic polyps: a meta-analysis

TL;DR: All endoscopic imaging techniques other than autofluorescence imaging could be used by appropriately trained endoscopists to make a reliable optical diagnosis for colonic lesions in daily practice.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical impact and characteristics of the narrow-band imaging magnifying endoscopic classification of colorectal tumors proposed by the Japan NBI Expert Team.

TL;DR: In this paper, a universal narrow-band imaging (NBI) magnifying endoscopic classification of colorectal tumors was proposed to evaluate the clinical usefulness of the JNET classification.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Narrow-band imaging in the diagnosis of colorectal mucosal lesions: a pilot study.

TL;DR: It is suggested that in the examination of colonic lesions the NBI system provides imaging features additional to those of both conventional endoscopy and chromoendoscopy.
Journal ArticleDOI

A prospective comparative study of narrow-band imaging, chromoendoscopy, and conventional colonoscopy in the diagnosis of colorectal neoplasia

TL;DR: Both low-magnification and high- magnification NBI were capable of distinguishing neoplastic from non-neoplastic colorectal lesions and the diagnostic accuracy of NBI was better than that of conventional colonoscopy and equivalent to that of chromoendoscopy.
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Comparative study of conventional colonoscopy, chromoendoscopy, and narrow-band imaging systems in differential diagnosis of neoplastic and nonneoplastic colonic polyps

TL;DR: The NBI system identified morphological details that correlate well with polyp histology by chromoendoscopy during differential diagnosis of neoplastic and nonneoplastic polyps.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prevalence of clinically important histology in small adenomas.

TL;DR: Adenomas 5-10 mm in size harbor pathologically significant histology, and the need for removal of these lesions must be addressed to optimize colorectal cancer prevention.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magnifying endoscopy with narrow band imaging for diagnosis of colorectal tumors

TL;DR: Determination of pit patterns of colorectal neoplasias by NBI magnification was nearly the same as that by standard magnification with chromoendoscopy, and NBI can distinguish neoplastic and nonneoplastic lesions without chromo endoscopy.
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