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Water Exchange Colonoscopy With Artificial Intelligence-assisted Detection

E

Evergreen General Hospital, Taiwan

Status

Completed

Conditions

Colon Adenoma
Colon Polyp
Colonoscopy

Treatments

Device: Water exchange plus Artificial Intelligence (AI)
Device: Water exchange alone

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

The goal of this clinical trial is to compare the detected adenoma per colonoscopy (APC) in participants undergoing screening, surveillance, and positive fecal immunochemical test (FIT) or guaiac fecal occult blood test (gFOBT). There will be two arms in this study: WE water control and water plus artificial intelligence (AI). The main question it aims to answer is whether the addition of AI into water exchange (WE) colonoscopy increases APC than WE alone. The control method will use water instead of air inserted into the colon. The study method will use a commercially available AI system plus water during the procedure. Researchers will compare APCs to see if the addition of AI increases detection of adenomas during WE colonoscopy.

Full description

This will be a multi-site, multi-national, unblinded investigators, prospective Random Control Trial (RCT). Randomization (1:1 to WE alone and WE-AI) will be based on computer generated random numbers placed inside opaque sealed envelopes. The envelope (in pre-arranged order) will be opened to reveal the code when the colonoscopist is ready to insert the endoscope to begin the examination. This will be a comparison of two different methods with two arms (WE, WE-AI) to see which one is better at detecting adenomas.

Patient recruitment will be conducted at three hospitals in Italy and Taiwan: Digestive Endoscopy Unit, CTO Hospital, Iglesias, Italy; Digestive Endoscopy and Gastroenterology Unit, Manzoni Hospital, Lecco, Italy; Evergreen General Hospital, Taoyuan, Taiwan. The Sepulveda Ambulatory Care Center, VAGLAHS, UCLA in the USA will be a non-recruiting participating site. The study period is expected to be 3 years (from November 2023 to October 2026).

Patients aged 45-75 y/o at average risk of colorectal cancer who are willing to participate will sign an informed consent before starting the colonoscopy procedure. Separate parallel randomization will be set up at each site, stratified by investigator and type of colonoscopy (primary screening, surveillance, or positive FIT or gFOBT). Mode of sedation will include unsedated, on demand sedation, conscious sedation or full sedation with propofol. Randomization will be carried out by computer-generated sequences using a block design (four participants per block).

Control Method: One arm of the study will include sedated/unsedated colonoscopy with water (WE) as the control method. Residual air in the colon will be removed and water will be infused to guide insertion through an airless lumen. Infused water will be removed by suction, along with residual fecal debris, predominantly during insertion.

Study method: The other arm entail the addition of a commercially available AI system (CAD-EYE, Fujifilm; Endo-AID, Olympus) to the high-definition colonoscopy system. This arm includes sedated/unsedated colonoscopy with AI detection device plus water (WE).

Enrollment

560 patients

Sex

All

Ages

45 to 75 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Male and female patients aged 45-75 years at average risk for colorectal cancer who plan to undergo colonoscopy for primary screening, postpolypectomy surveillance, and individuals with positive fecal immunochemical test or guaiac fecal occult blood test results.

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients with a history of inflammatory bowel disease
  • Patients with hereditary colorectal cancer syndrome or serrated polyposis syndrome
  • Patients with a personal history of colorectal cancer
  • Patients with a history of colorectal resection
  • Patients with colonic stricture
  • Patient with severe comorbid illnesses rendering polypectomy unsafe
  • Patients with colonoscopy contraindications (e.g., acute diverticulitis or toxic megacolon)
  • Therapeutic colonoscopy (e.g., hemostasis, removal of a large polyp)
  • Emergent colonoscopy
  • Pregnant women or those planning pregnancy
  • Patients unwilling to participate in the study

Trial design

Primary purpose

Screening

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

560 participants in 2 patient groups

Water exchange alone
Active Comparator group
Description:
Residual air in the colon will be removed, water will be infused to guide insertion through an airless lumen. Infused water will be removed by suction, along with residual fecal debris, predominantly during insertion.
Treatment:
Device: Water exchange alone
Device: Water exchange plus Artificial Intelligence (AI)
Water exchange plus Artificial intelligence (AI)
Experimental group
Description:
During colonoscopic insertion, residual air in the colon will be removed, water will be infused to guide insertion through an airless lumen. Infused water will be removed by suction, along with residual fecal debris, predominantly during insertion. A commercially available AI system (CAD-EYE, Fujifilm, used in Taiwan; Endo-AID, Olympus used in Italy) will be employed. During AI-assisted procedures, the AI will be activated during the withdrawal phase of the procedure, providing a bounding box as output any time a lesion that is suspected to be a polyp is recognized by the AI device.
Treatment:
Device: Water exchange alone
Device: Water exchange plus Artificial Intelligence (AI)

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Sergio Cadoni; Chi-Liang Cheng

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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