Original Article

Vol. 34 No. 11 (2023): 2023.34.11-Turkish Journal of Gastroenterology

Concordance of Dye-Spraying Chromoendoscopy and Virtual Chromoendoscopy for Colonic Dysplasia Detection in Longstanding Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Main Article Content

João Paulo Laranjeira Correia
Ana Ponte
Luisa Proença
Adélia Rodrigues
Rolando Pinho
Sónia Leite
Carlos Fernandes
Jaime Rodrigues
João Carlos Silva
Catarina Gomes
Edgar Afecto
Maria Manuela Estevinho
Pedro Mesquita
Teresa Freitas

Abstract

Background/Aims: In the past, dye-spraying chromoendoscopy was the technique of choice for colonic surveillance in patients with long-standing extensive inflammatory bowel disease. Recent evidence suggests that virtual chromoendoscopy is an equally acceptable technique.<br>
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Materials and Methods: Eleven gastroenterologists were given a survey with 20 pairs of pictures from inflammatory bowel disease surveillance colonoscopies (10 with nondysplastic lesions, 5 with dysplastic lesions, and 5 with no lesions). Each pair contained the same image captured during colonoscopy using indigo carmine and narrow-band imaging. For each picture, the gastroenterologist assessed the presence/absence of lesion and, when a lesion was identified, assessed the presence/absence of dysplasia and delineated its margins. To compare lesion and dysplasia detection between techniques, sensitivity, specificity, and interobserver agreement were calculated. The chi-square test was used to assess the accuracy of margins delineation.<br>
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Results: When assessing lesion and dysplasia detection, similar sensitivity and specificity values were obtained for both techniques. Interobserver agreement analysis revealed that dye-spraying chromoendoscopy and virtual chromoendoscopy had a moderate agreement in lesion detection but, for dysplasia detection, dye-spraying chromoendoscopy had a slight agreement [K = 0.11 (0.03-0.18), P < .01] and virtual chromoendoscopy a fair agreement [K = 0.30 (0.22-0.37), P < .01]. Margin delineation was similar between techniques.<br>
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Conclusion: Sensitivity and specificity for lesion and dysplasia detection, as well as the accuracy of margins delineation, were similar between dye-spraying chromoendoscopy and virtual chromoendoscopy. Interobserver agreement for dysplasia detection was suboptimal in both techniques; however, it was superior when using virtual chromoendoscopy. These findings suggest that virtual chromoendoscopy constitutes a valid alternative for dysplasia screening in inflammatory bowel disease.<br>
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Cite this article as: Correia JPL, Ponte A, Proença L, et al. Concordance of dye-spraying chromoendoscopy and virtual chromoendoscopy for colonic dysplasia detection in longstanding inflammatory bowel disease. Turk J Gastroenterol. 2023;34(11):1150-1155.

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