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UTILISATION OF THE CYTOSPONGE DEVICE AS A TOOL FOR RISK STRATIFICATION IN PATIENTS WITH BARRETT'S OESOPHAGUS WHO ARE OVERDUE ENDOSCOPIC SURVEILLANCE DUE TO THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC
Gastroenterology ; 162(7):S-720-S-721, 2022.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-1967367
ABSTRACT

Introduction:

At the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, all patients undergoing endoscopic surveillance for Barrett's Oesophagus (BE) in the UK were indefinitely postponed. As well as the potential for missed progression to dysplasia, the negative impact on patients' quality of life is immeasurable. The Cytosponge® is a minimally invasive cell sampling device which has been researched in screening for BE. We describe the first worldwide use of the Cytosponge® outside of a clinical trial to support the triage of BE patients unable to undergo endoscopic surveillance due to COVID-19. Aims and

Methods:

Consecutive patients with non-dysplastic BE (NDBE) or those deemed to be low risk after previous treatment for BErelated dysplasia, DBE (more than 18 months after completion of therapy with no visible BE and no intestinal metaplasia/dysplasia at last endoscopy) with no prior history of stenosis who were overdue endoscopy (OGD) were invited to have the Cytosponge®. The sample was analysed for TFF3 (a marker of intestinal metaplasia), cellular atypia and p53. Fisher's test was used to examine the association between the overall cytosponge result and its individual components with follow-up OGD outcomes.

Results:

To date, 153 patients (mean age 66 years, 126 male) have undergone the Cytosponge® procedure. The median maximal length of BE was 3cm (1-15cm). Three patients were unable to swallow the device and 19 (12%) needed a repeat procedure as no columnar cells were present suggesting that the sponge had not entered the stomach. 87 patients (80%) with NDBE had a either a low-risk result (TFF3 positive only – 62) or required a repeat Cytosponge® routinely (TFF3/atypia/ p53 negative – 25). The remaining 21 patients (20%) needed an OGD within 3 months, 17 of which have since had an OGD. Of these 17 patients, 4 had a new diagnosis of dysplasia (indefinite - 2, low grade dysplasia – 1, intramucosal cancer - 1) and 2 a new diagnosis of cancer. 18/87 patients in the low-risk NDBE cohort have undergone follow-up OGD (NDBE 17/18, high grade dysplasia 1/18). Of the 23 patients in the post-treatment BE cohort, 1 patient had a high-risk result and subsequent OGD confirmed HGD (Table 1). A high-risk cytosponge result and the presence of both p53 and typia were all associated with a positive OGD result. Over-expression of p53 appeared to be the most sensitive marker (Table 2). In treatment naive patients, a low-risk cytosponge result was closely associated with no dysplasia detected at follow-up OGD with a negative predictive value of 94%.

Conclusions:

Cytosponge® has proved to be a useful non-endoscopic tool for patients with BE under surveillance where OGD is not possible. Preliminary data are promising to help triage patients and may in turn offer a less invasive approach to monitoring patients compared to endoscopy, particuarly for low risk patients. (Table Presented) (Table Presented)
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Full text: Available Collection: Databases of international organizations Database: EMBASE Type of study: Prognostic study Language: English Journal: Gastroenterology Year: 2022 Document Type: Article

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Full text: Available Collection: Databases of international organizations Database: EMBASE Type of study: Prognostic study Language: English Journal: Gastroenterology Year: 2022 Document Type: Article