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Colo-colonic Intussusception as the First Presentation of Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma (DLBCL) in a Young Adult [Meeting Abstract]
Mone, Anjali; Chang, Shannon; Poppers, David
ISI:000363715900406
ISSN: 1572-0241
CID: 1854272
In vivo diagnostic accuracy of high-resolution microendoscopy in differentiating neoplastic from non-neoplastic colorectal polyps: a prospective study
Parikh, Neil D; Perl, Daniel; Lee, Michelle H; Shah, Brijen; Young, Yuki; Chang, Shannon S; Shukla, Richa; Polydorides, Alexandros D; Moshier, Erin; Godbold, James; Zhou, Elinor; Mitcham, Josephine; Richards-Kortum, Rebecca; Anandasabapathy, Sharmila
OBJECTIVES: High-resolution microendoscopy (HRME) is a low-cost, "optical biopsy" technology that allows for subcellular imaging. The purpose of this study was to determine the in vivo diagnostic accuracy of the HRME for the differentiation of neoplastic from non-neoplastic colorectal polyps and compare it to that of high-definition white-light endoscopy (WLE) with histopathology as the gold standard. METHODS: Three endoscopists prospectively detected a total of 171 polyps from 94 patients that were then imaged by HRME and classified in real-time as neoplastic (adenomatous, cancer) or non-neoplastic (normal, hyperplastic, inflammatory). RESULTS: HRME had a significantly higher accuracy (94%), specificity (95%), and positive predictive value (PPV, 87%) for the determination of neoplastic colorectal polyps compared with WLE (65%, 39%, and 55%, respectively). When looking at small colorectal polyps (less than 10 mm), HRME continued to significantly outperform WLE in terms of accuracy (95% vs. 64%), specificity (98% vs. 40%) and PPV (92% vs. 55%). These trends continued when evaluating diminutive polyps (less than 5 mm) as HRME's accuracy (95%), specificity (98%), and PPV (93%) were all significantly greater than their WLE counterparts (62%, 41%, and 53%, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: In conclusion, this in vivo study demonstrates that HRME can be a very effective modality in the differentiation of neoplastic and non-neoplastic colorectal polyps. A combination of standard white-light colonoscopy for polyp detection and HRME for polyp classification has the potential to truly allow the endoscopist to selectively determine which lesions can be left in situ, which lesions can simply be discarded, and which lesions need formal histopathologic analysis.
PMCID:3947255
PMID: 24296752
ISSN: 1572-0241
CID: 2197972
High resolution microendoscopy for classification of colorectal polyps
Chang, S S; Shukla, R; Polydorides, A D; Vila, P M; Lee, M; Han, H; Kedia, P; Lewis, J; Gonzalez, S; Kim, M K; Harpaz, N; Godbold, J; Richards-Kortum, R; Anandasabapathy, S
BACKGROUND AND STUDY AIMS: It can be difficult to distinguish adenomas from benign polyps during routine colonoscopy. High resolution microendoscopy (HRME) is a novel method for imaging colorectal mucosa with subcellular detail. HRME criteria for the classification of colorectal neoplasia have not been previously described. Study goals were to develop criteria to characterize HRME images of colorectal mucosa (normal, hyperplastic polyps, adenomas, cancer) and to determine the accuracy and interobserver variability for the discrimination of neoplastic from non-neoplastic polyps when these criteria were applied by novice and expert microendoscopists. METHODS: Two expert pathologists created consensus HRME image criteria using images from 68 patients with polyps who had undergone colonoscopy plus HRME. Using these criteria, HRME expert and novice microendoscopists were shown a set of training images and then tested to determine accuracy and interobserver variability. RESULTS: Expert microendoscopists identified neoplasia with sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of 67 % (95 % confidence interval [CI] 58 % - 75 %), 97 % (94 % - 100 %), and 87 %, respectively. Nonexperts achieved sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of 73 % (66 % - 80 %), 91 % (80 % - 100 %), and 85 %, respectively. Overall, neoplasia were identified with sensitivity 70 % (65 % - 76 %), specificity 94 % (87 % - 100 %), and accuracy 85 %. Kappa values were: experts 0.86; nonexperts 0.72; and overall 0.78. CONCLUSIONS: Using the new criteria, observers achieved high specificity and substantial interobserver agreement for distinguishing benign polyps from neoplasia. Increased expertise in HRME imaging improves accuracy. This low-cost microendoscopic platform may be an alternative to confocal microendoscopy in lower-resource or community-based settings.
PMID: 23780842
ISSN: 1438-8812
CID: 2243582
Detection of Colonic Adenomas Using a Low-Cost, High Resolution Microendoscope: Assessment of Accuracy and Interobserver Variability [Meeting Abstract]
Chang, Shannon S; Shukla, Richa; Lee, Michelle H; Vila, Peter M; Han, Hyosun; Kedia, Prashant; Lewis, Jeffrey R; Gonzalez, Susana; Kim, Michelle K; Polydorides, Alexandros D; Richards-Kortum, Rebecca; Anandasabapathy, Sharmila
ISI:000306994301611
ISSN: 0016-5085
CID: 2198002
Peutz-Jeghers syndrome: a rare cause of gastric outlet obstruction [Case Report]
Chang, Shannon; Kalarickal, John; Joshi, Virendra
PMID: 19558993
ISSN: 1542-7714
CID: 2197962
Pancreatic Burkitt's lymphoma presenting as recurrent acute pancreatitis in an HIV patient: Early diagnosis using EUS/FNA [Meeting Abstract]
Chang, Shannon; Casey, Lisa; Joshi, Virendra
ISI:000259145200767
ISSN: 0002-9270
CID: 2197992
Two cases of gastric sarcoidosis manifesting as symptomatic anemia: Endoscopic clues [Meeting Abstract]
Chang, Shannon; Victor, David; Kalarickal, John; Pollack, Scott; Copur, Nadret; regenstein, Fredric
ISI:000259145200723
ISSN: 0002-9270
CID: 2197982