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Clinical usefulness of magnifying endoscopy for non-ampullary duodenal tumors

Study aims This study aimed to investigate the clinical usefulness of magnifying endoscopy (ME) for non-ampullary duodenal tumors. Patients and methods We enrolled 103 consecutive patients with non-ampullary duodenal tumors that were observed by ME with narrow-band imaging (ME-NBI) and had pit patte...

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Autores principales: Mizumoto, Takeshi, Sanomura, Yoji, Tanaka, Shinji, Kuroki, Kazutoshi, Kurihara, Mio, Yoshifuku, Yoshikazu, Oka, Shiro, Arihiro, Koji, Shimamoto, Fumio, Chayama, Kazuaki
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: © Georg Thieme Verlag KG 2017
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5378549/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28382328
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0043-103681
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author Mizumoto, Takeshi
Sanomura, Yoji
Tanaka, Shinji
Kuroki, Kazutoshi
Kurihara, Mio
Yoshifuku, Yoshikazu
Oka, Shiro
Arihiro, Koji
Shimamoto, Fumio
Chayama, Kazuaki
author_facet Mizumoto, Takeshi
Sanomura, Yoji
Tanaka, Shinji
Kuroki, Kazutoshi
Kurihara, Mio
Yoshifuku, Yoshikazu
Oka, Shiro
Arihiro, Koji
Shimamoto, Fumio
Chayama, Kazuaki
author_sort Mizumoto, Takeshi
collection PubMed
description Study aims This study aimed to investigate the clinical usefulness of magnifying endoscopy (ME) for non-ampullary duodenal tumors. Patients and methods We enrolled 103 consecutive patients with non-ampullary duodenal tumors that were observed by ME with narrow-band imaging (ME-NBI) and had pit pattern analysis before endoscopic resection at Hiroshima University Hospital before December 2014. ME-NBI images were classified as Type B or Type C according to the Hiroshima classification, and pit patterns were classified as regular or irregular. We studied the clinicopathological features and diagnoses with ME-NBI and pit pattern analyses according to the Vienna classification (category 3: 73 patients; category 4: 30 patients). Results Category 4 lesions were significantly larger than category 3 lesions. According to ME-NBI images, category 4 Type C lesions (83 %) were significantly more common than category 4 Type B lesions (17 %). According to pit pattern analyses, category 4 irregular lesions 4 (77 %) were significantly more common than category 4 regular lesions (23 %). The accuracies of using Type C ME-NBI images and irregular pit patterns to diagnose category 4 lesions were 87 % and 84 %, the sensitivities were 83 % and 77 %, and the specificities were 89 % and 88 %, respectively. There was no significant difference between ME-NBI and pit pattern analyses for diagnosing the histologic grade of non-ampullary duodenal tumors. Conclusion Our study showed that ME-NBI and pit pattern analysis had equivalent abilities to determine the histologic grade of non-ampullary duodenal tumors. ME-NBI may be more useful because it is a simple, less time-consuming procedure.
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spelling pubmed-53785492017-04-05 Clinical usefulness of magnifying endoscopy for non-ampullary duodenal tumors Mizumoto, Takeshi Sanomura, Yoji Tanaka, Shinji Kuroki, Kazutoshi Kurihara, Mio Yoshifuku, Yoshikazu Oka, Shiro Arihiro, Koji Shimamoto, Fumio Chayama, Kazuaki Endosc Int Open Study aims This study aimed to investigate the clinical usefulness of magnifying endoscopy (ME) for non-ampullary duodenal tumors. Patients and methods We enrolled 103 consecutive patients with non-ampullary duodenal tumors that were observed by ME with narrow-band imaging (ME-NBI) and had pit pattern analysis before endoscopic resection at Hiroshima University Hospital before December 2014. ME-NBI images were classified as Type B or Type C according to the Hiroshima classification, and pit patterns were classified as regular or irregular. We studied the clinicopathological features and diagnoses with ME-NBI and pit pattern analyses according to the Vienna classification (category 3: 73 patients; category 4: 30 patients). Results Category 4 lesions were significantly larger than category 3 lesions. According to ME-NBI images, category 4 Type C lesions (83 %) were significantly more common than category 4 Type B lesions (17 %). According to pit pattern analyses, category 4 irregular lesions 4 (77 %) were significantly more common than category 4 regular lesions (23 %). The accuracies of using Type C ME-NBI images and irregular pit patterns to diagnose category 4 lesions were 87 % and 84 %, the sensitivities were 83 % and 77 %, and the specificities were 89 % and 88 %, respectively. There was no significant difference between ME-NBI and pit pattern analyses for diagnosing the histologic grade of non-ampullary duodenal tumors. Conclusion Our study showed that ME-NBI and pit pattern analysis had equivalent abilities to determine the histologic grade of non-ampullary duodenal tumors. ME-NBI may be more useful because it is a simple, less time-consuming procedure. © Georg Thieme Verlag KG 2017-04 /pmc/articles/PMC5378549/ /pubmed/28382328 http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0043-103681 Text en © Thieme Medical Publishers
spellingShingle Mizumoto, Takeshi
Sanomura, Yoji
Tanaka, Shinji
Kuroki, Kazutoshi
Kurihara, Mio
Yoshifuku, Yoshikazu
Oka, Shiro
Arihiro, Koji
Shimamoto, Fumio
Chayama, Kazuaki
Clinical usefulness of magnifying endoscopy for non-ampullary duodenal tumors
title Clinical usefulness of magnifying endoscopy for non-ampullary duodenal tumors
title_full Clinical usefulness of magnifying endoscopy for non-ampullary duodenal tumors
title_fullStr Clinical usefulness of magnifying endoscopy for non-ampullary duodenal tumors
title_full_unstemmed Clinical usefulness of magnifying endoscopy for non-ampullary duodenal tumors
title_short Clinical usefulness of magnifying endoscopy for non-ampullary duodenal tumors
title_sort clinical usefulness of magnifying endoscopy for non-ampullary duodenal tumors
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5378549/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28382328
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0043-103681
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