Image-Enhanced Endoscopy Is Critical in the Surveillance of Patients with Colonic IBD




Cancer risk in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) involving the colon is high and increases with time. The quality and efficacy of colonoscopic surveillance is variable. Chromoendoscopy with targeted biopsies is superior to standard white light endoscopy with random biopsies. Although commonly practiced, the technique of random colonic biopsies has poor yield for dysplasia and has little clinical consequence. Studies have shown a limited role for electronic-based image-enhanced endoscopy, including narrow band imaging, in detecting IBD dysplasia. Efforts should focus on the dissemination of the technique of chromoendoscopy in routine clinical practice through training and quality metrics.


Key points








  • Cancer risk in patients with colonic inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is high and increases over time. Quality and efficacy of surveillance is variable in routine clinical practice.



  • Chromoendoscopy (CE) is recommended by most societies as the preferred test for colorectal cancer (CRC) surveillance in patients with colonic IBD. It has been shown unequivocally to improve dysplasia detection on targeted biopsies.



  • Narrow band imaging has not shown superior dysplasia detected on targeted biopsies compared with CE or with white light imaging.


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Sep 10, 2017 | Posted by in GASTOINESTINAL SURGERY | Comments Off on Image-Enhanced Endoscopy Is Critical in the Surveillance of Patients with Colonic IBD

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