Abstract

Gastric intestinal metaplasia (IM) is considered precancerous and is difficult to differentiate upon endoscopy. Endocytoscopy enables observation at a cellular level for focused biopsy. The present study examined the use of endocytoscopy for recognition of gastric IM. Patients with a history of gastric IM were recruited. We first carried out narrow band imaging (NBI) endoscopy to look for suspicious areas of gastric IM. A prototype endocytoscope with a magnification of 450× was used to re-examine these areas. Areas examined were biopsied for histological comparison. Presence of goblet cells was considered as representative of IM upon endocytoscopy. Twenty patients were recruited with NBI demonstrating 102 suspicious lesions of gastric IM. Mean age of patients was 53.9 ± 7.6 years. Upon histology, 72 biopsies were confirmed as gastric IM, 15 showed IM and low-grade dysplasia, whereas 15were diagnosed as chronic gastritis. Endocytoscopy image quality was significantly better for areas of IM as compared to gastritis (P < 0.05; OR 21.7 [95% CI 4.5-105.9]). The presence of goblet cells upon endocytoscopy achieved a diagnostic accuracy of 0.86 for gastric IM. Receiver operator characteristics curve achieved an area under curve of 0.8 with the presence of goblet cells under endocytoscopy as compared to 0.64 for NBI alone. Presence of goblet cells upon endocytoscopy indicates a diagnosis of gastric IM. Image quality of endocytoscopy, however, is suboptimal. Further developments in endocytoscopy should focus on image quality and staining methods to enhance differentiation between IM, dysplasia and early gastric cancer.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call