Medicine (St Vincent's) - Research Publications

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    Quality of upper GI endoscopy: a prospective cohort study on impact of endoscopist education
    Yang, LS ; Thompson, AJ ; Taylor, ACF ; Desmond, P ; Holt, BA (MOSBY-ELSEVIER, 2022-03)
    BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Guidelines on quality of upper GI (UGI) endoscopy have been proposed by the British Society of Gastroenterology (BSG) and European Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ESGE). However, these guidelines have not been evaluated in clinical practice. We aimed to measure the impact of endoscopist education on the quality of gastroscopy based on these guidelines and the association between compliance with guidelines and the detection of clinically significant premalignant pathology such as Barrett's esophagus (BE), esophageal squamous dysplasia, gastric intestinal metaplasia (GIM), and Helicobacter pylori. METHODS: Endoscopists participated in a 1-hour education session on recommended performance measures and endoscopic detection of premalignant pathologies. A controlled before and after study was performed, measuring compliance with guidelines and rates of detection of pathology in control and intervention groups. RESULTS: Over 2 years, 2719 procedures were performed: 1412 in the control group and 1307 in the intervention group. The proportion of procedures complying with guidelines was higher in the intervention group. The use of biopsy sampling protocols (eg, management of precancerous conditions of the stomach, 52% vs 91%; P = .007) and standardized terminology (eg, Forrest classification, 24% vs 68%; P < .001) was significantly higher. Detection of H pylori was higher in the intervention group (5.5% vs 9.8%, P = .003). Minimum inspection time of 7 minutes was associated with detection of BE (7.4% vs 2.0%, P < .001). CONCLUSIONS: A simple endoscopist education session enhanced the quality of UGI endoscopy by improving compliance with BSG and ESGE recommendations and increasing the detection of clinically significant pathology. A minimum inspection time of 7 minutes was associated with increased diagnostic yield and may be a feasible quality indicator for clinical practice.
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    Clinical application and diagnostic accuracy of artificial intelligence in colonoscopy for inflammatory bowel disease: systematic review
    Yang, LS ; Perry, E ; Shan, L ; Wilding, H ; Connell, W ; Thompson, AJ ; Taylor, ACF ; Desmond, P ; Holt, BA (GEORG THIEME VERLAG KG, 2022-07)
    Background and aims  Artificial intelligence (AI) technology is being evaluated for its potential to improve colonoscopic assessment of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), particularly with computer-aided image classifiers. This review evaluates the clinical application and diagnostic test accuracy (DTA) of AI algorithms in colonoscopy for IBD. Methods  A systematic review was performed on studies evaluating AI in colonoscopy of adult patients with IBD. MEDLINE, Embase, Emcare, PsycINFO, CINAHL, Cochrane Library and Clinicaltrials.gov databases were searched on 28 th April 2021 for English language articles published between January 1, 2000 and April 28, 2021. Risk of bias and applicability were assessed with the Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies-2 tool. Diagnostic accuracy was presented as median (interquartile range). Results  Of 1029 records screened, nine studies with 7813 patients were included for review. AI was used to predict endoscopic and histologic disease activity in ulcerative colitis, and differentiation of Crohn's disease from Behcet's disease and intestinal tuberculosis. DTA of AI algorithms ranged between 52-91 %. The sensitivity and specificity for AI algorithms predicting endoscopic severity of disease were 78 % (range 72-83, interquartile range 5.5) and 91 % (range 86-96, interquartile range 5), respectively. Conclusions  AI has been primarily used to assess disease activity in ulcerative colitis. The diagnostic performance is promising and suggests potential for other clinical application of AI in IBD colonoscopy such as dysplasia detection. However, current evidence is limited by retrospective data and models trained on still images only. Future prospective multicenter studies with full-motion videos are needed to replicate the real-world clinical setting.
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    Evaluation of Endoscopic Practices and Outcomes in Follow-up of Gastric Ulcers
    Yang, LS ; Hartley, I ; Thompson, AJ ; Desmond, P ; Taylor, ACF ; Moss, A ; Holt, BA (LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS, 2022-05)
    GOAL: The aim of this study was to evaluate current practice in gastric ulcer follow-up to establish diagnostic yield and predictors of malignancy. BACKGROUND: Repeat gastroscopy is routinely performed to confirm gastric ulcer healing and exclude malignancy. However, the incidence of malignancy at follow-up endoscopy is low, without consensus regarding case selection and timing. STUDY: New gastric ulcers diagnosed on gastroscopy at 2 institutions in Australia were identified through keyword search of endoscopy reports over a 5-year period (2013 to 2017). Data collected included patient demographics, clinical presentation, and endoscopic and histologic findings from initial and subsequent gastroscopies. RESULTS: Of 795 patients, repeat gastroscopy was performed in 440 (55%). Malignancy was diagnosed in 52 (7%) with 83% identified at initial gastroscopy. Eight cancers were identified at repeat gastroscopy with malignancy yield of 2% (8/440). Three were diagnosed in patients with benign initial ulcer histology (3/286, 1%). One cancer was diagnosed during follow-up in a patient with benign histology but no repeat gastroscopy (1/286, 0.3%). Predictors of benign ulcers were absence of endoscopic suspicion [odds ratio (OR) 0.1 (0.03-0.13), P≤0.005], complete healing on repeat gastroscopy [OR 0.5 (0.34-0.70), P=0.036] and benign initial histology [OR 0.12 (0.43-0.90), P≤0.005]. CONCLUSIONS: Seven percent of new gastric ulcers were malignant with most identified with biopsy on initial gastroscopy. Malignancy yield from follow-up gastroscopy was 2%. Diagnostic yield of endoscopic follow-up may be low in ulcers with benign appearance and adequate histology. However, current practice of repeat gastroscopy is warranted in the absence of patient-based and lesion-based predictors of malignancy.
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    Endoscopic features of buried Barrett's mucosa: visible to the trained eye?
    Yang, L ; Holt, B ; Williams, R ; Tsoi, E ; Cameron, G ; Desmond, P ; Taylor, A (Wiley, 2019-12-01)