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Study on Second Forward View Examination in the Right Colon

The Chinese University of Hong Kong logo

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

Status

Completed

Conditions

Colonic Polyp
Colorectal Cancer

Treatments

Diagnostic Test: Second forward view (SFV) examination of the right colon

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03121495
SFVRC Study

Details and patient eligibility

About

It is estimated that there are about 1.4 million patients with colorectal cancer (CRC) worldwide, with a rising trend in CRC incidence in many Asian Pacific countries. In Hong Kong, colorectal cancer ranks first in cancer incidence and second in cancer mortality based on data from 2013.

CRC is one of the most preventable cancers because its development in general follows an adenoma-carcinoma sequence. Adenomas are considered precursor lesions for CRC.

While early detection and removal of colorectal adenoma by screening colonoscopy with polypectomy reduce CRC incidence and mortality, interval cancers (cancers that develop after a colonoscopy and before the next scheduled colonoscopy) may still occur and were reported to account for up to 10.5% of CRC. The protective effect of colonoscopy against cancer in the right colon has not been consistently demonstrated. Interval CRC has been associated with proximal colon location, small lesion, flat lesion, missed lesion, inadequate examination, incomplete resection of lesion, tumor biology, and low adenoma detection rate (ADR).

High ADR (eg, ≥ 20%) has been associated with a reduced risk of interval CRC. Methods that can improve polyp detection in the right colon such as retroflexed examination of the right colon, second forward view examination of the right colon, use of colonic fold flattening device, colonoscope with an increased field of view may potentially reduce the risk of interval CRC, but data is still limited. Performance of a second forward view (SFV) examination of the right colon may be the easiest and safest from a practical standpoint when compared to other options (eg, additional training is often needed for retroflexed examination of the right colon since there may be a potentially higher risk of perforation in endoscopists not familiar with the technique, additional equipment is needed when using a colonic fold flattening device, or a colonoscope with an increased field of view).

Our current study aims to determine whether a routine SFV examination in the right colon can lead to an increase in adenoma / polyp detection when compared to conventional withdrawal examination in the right colon in both male and female patients undergoing screening and surveillance colonoscopies.

Full description

It is estimated that there are about 1.4 million patients with colorectal cancer (CRC) worldwide, with a rising trend in CRC incidence in many Asian Pacific countries. In Hong Kong, colorectal cancer ranks first in cancer incidence and second in cancer mortality based on data from 2013.

CRC is one of the most preventable cancers because its development in general follows an adenoma-carcinoma sequence. Adenomas are considered precursor lesions for CRC.

While early detection and removal of colorectal adenoma by screening colonoscopy with polypectomy reduce CRC incidence and mortality, interval cancers (cancers that develop after a colonoscopy and before the next scheduled colonoscopy) may still occur and were reported to account for up to 10.5% of CRC. The protective effect of colonoscopy against cancer in the right colon has not been consistently demonstrated. Interval CRC has been associated with proximal colon location, small lesion, flat lesion, missed lesion, inadequate examination, incomplete resection of lesion, tumor biology, and low adenoma detection rate (ADR).

High ADR (eg, ≥ 20%) has been associated with a reduced risk of interval CRC. Methods that can improve polyp detection in the right colon such as retroflexed examination of the right colon, second forward view examination of the right colon, use of colonic fold flattening device, colonoscope with an increased field of view may potentially reduce the risk of interval CRC, but data is still limited. Performance of a second forward view (SFV) examination of the right colon may be the easiest and safest from a practical standpoint when compared to other options (eg, additional training is often needed for retroflexed examination of the right colon since there may be a potentially higher risk of perforation in endoscopists not familiar with the technique, additional equipment is needed when using a colonic fold flattening device, or a colonoscope with an increased field of view).

Our current study aims to determine whether a routine SFV examination in the right colon can lead to an increase in adenoma / polyp detection when compared to conventional withdrawal examination in the right colon in both male and female patients undergoing screening and surveillance colonoscopies.

Enrollment

1,011 patients

Sex

All

Ages

50 to 75 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Patients undergoing colonoscopy for CRC screening or polyp surveillance
  • Age 50 - 75 years
  • Written informed consent available

Exclusion Criteria

  • Contraindications for endoscopy due to comorbidities
  • Unable to provide written informed consent
  • Personal history of prior resection of any portion of the colon, familial polyposis syndrome, inflammatory bowel disease
  • Patients with incomplete colonoscopy (i.e, inability to achieve cecal intubation), a Boston Bowel Preparation Scale (BBPS) score of 0 in either right colon, transverse colon, or left colon at the time of colonoscopy
  • Known history of coagulopathy and thrombocytopenia
  • Pregnant patients

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

1,011 participants in 2 patient groups

Second forward view exam
Active Comparator group
Description:
During withdrawal, the colonoscope will be advanced to the cecum again when hepatic flexure was reached the first time, where a second forward view (SFV) examination of the right colon will be performed.
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: Second forward view (SFV) examination of the right colon
Conventional withdrawal exam
No Intervention group
Description:
No intervention additional to the conventional withdrawal examination during withdrawal

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

3

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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