Abstract
BackgroundHigh cecal intubation rate (CIR) is associated with significant improved adenoma detection rate (ADR), however, self-reported CIR may be overestimated and inadequate documentation of cecal intubation is associated with a lower polyp detection rate compared to clear documentation. We aimed to investigate if ileal intubation may be associated with higher detection rates (DR) for right-sided conventional adenomas (cAD) and serrated polyps (SP) compared to cecal intubation in a large screening colonoscopy cohort.Material and methodsRetrospective analysis of individuals ≥50 years with average risk for colorectal cancer (CRC) who underwent screening colonoscopy between 01/01/2012 and 14/12/2016 at a tertiary academic hospital and six community-based private practices. Exclusion criteria were conditions with increased risk for CRC (e.g. inflammatory bowel disease, history of CRC, hereditary cancer syndromes), previous colonoscopy at the same institution, and incomplete procedures. Right-sided colon was defined as caecum and ascending colon.Results4.138 individuals were analysed (mean age 62 years, 52.1% female). DR for right-sided cADs and SPs were significantly higher after ileal compared to cecal intubation in univariate (12.5% vs. 6.8%, p < 0.001, and 6.3% vs. 3.3%, p < 0.001), but not in multivariate analysis (OR 1.025, 95%-CI 0.639–1.646, p = 0.918, and OR 0.937, 95%-CI 0.671–1.309, p = 0.704). DRs did not differ between ileal and cecal intubation for endoscopists with ADR ≥25 and < 25%, respectively. ADR ≥25% was significantly associated with ileal intubation (OR 21.862, 95%-CI 18.049–26.481, p < 0.001).ConclusionIleal intubation may not provide any benefit over cecal intubation concerning the detection of cADs and SPs in the right-sided colon.
Highlights
High cecal intubation rate (CIR) is associated with significant improved adenoma detection rate (ADR), self-reported CIR may be overestimated and inadequate documentation of cecal intubation is associated with a lower polyp detection rate compared to clear documentation
Ileal intubation may not provide any benefit over cecal intubation concerning the detection of conventional adenomas (cAD) and serrated polyps (SP) in the right-sided colon
The aim of this study was to investigate if ileal intubation may be associated with higher detection rates of right-sided conventional adenomas and SP compared to cecal intubation in a large screening colonoscopy cohort
Summary
High cecal intubation rate (CIR) is associated with significant improved adenoma detection rate (ADR), self-reported CIR may be overestimated and inadequate documentation of cecal intubation is associated with a lower polyp detection rate compared to clear documentation. We aimed to investigate if ileal intubation may be associated with higher detection rates (DR) for right-sided conventional adenomas (cAD) and serrated polyps (SP) compared to cecal intubation in a large screening colonoscopy cohort. Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the most frequent cancers worldwide with an estimated age-standardized incidence rate of 23.1/100.000 and with 1.8 million newly diagnosed cases worldwide in 2018 [1]. It develops through the adenoma-carcinoma-sequence and the serrated pathway which accounts for up to one third of all CRCs [2]. A meta-analysis of six studies comprising 465 patients demonstrated a pooled adenoma miss rate of 22% (95%-CI 19–26) [14]
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