Abstract
Early gastric cancer lesions are subtle, focally distributed, and poorly visible endoscopically. Therefore, endoscopists have difficulties evaluating these subtle early gastric cancer lesions. The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of linked color imaging (LCI) for the visualization of early gastric cancer in comparison to white light endoscopy (WLE) alone, when assessed by non-expert endoscopists. 40 unique cases of early gastric cancer, visualized in both WLE and LCI, were collected for this study. To establish ground truth, all cases were delineated by three expert endoscopists from Japan. Using a web based module, these cases were delineated by 48 non-expert endoscopist assessors of four different countries (Japan, Netherlands, Portugal and Sweden). Endoscopic expertise was divided into different levels: fellow in training, junior endoscopist and senior endoscopist. The module consists of three assessment phases, with a wash-out period of 2 weeks in between each phase. Assessment 1: WLE alone; Assessment 2: LCI alone; Assessment 3: WLE+LCI in a side-to-side display. The outcomes of this study were: 1) overlap between assessors’ delineation and expert ground truth; 2) assessors’ delineation performance in terms of differentiating between neoplastic tissue and normal tissue; 3) ability to delineate the lesions (VAS-scores 1-10); 4) assessors’ preferred imaging modality (WLE, LCI or no preference). Linear mixed-effect models showed a significant increase in assessors’ delineation performance from 77% (SD 26%) in WLE alone and 75% (SD 28%) in LCI alone to 81% (SD 24%) when combining both imaging modalities (P < 0.001). When differentiating neoplastic from non-dysplastic tissue, the combination WLE+LCI also caused increased performance scores (49% in WLE and 49% in LCI to 53% in WLE+LCI; P < 0.001). Japanese assessors performed significantly better than Dutch, Portuguese and Swedish assessors when delineating early gastric cancer lesions, regardless of imaging modality (87% vs. 71%, 72% and 73% respectively; P < 0.001). There was no distinction between the different levels of endoscopic expertise. Median VAS scores were higher for phase 2 (6; IQR 5-8) and 3 (7; IQR 5-8) compared with phase 1 (5; IQR 3-7) for the ability to delineate the lesion (P < 0.001). Assessors preferred LCI over WLE (72.4% vs. 5.2%, 22.4% no preference) for the appreciation of early gastric cancer lesions. The combined use of WLE and LCI resulted in enhanced delineation of early gastric cancer lesions by non-expert endoscopists. Although assessors appreciated the ability of LCI for delineation better than WLE, there was no difference in separate delineation scores for LCI and WLE.
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