Geometry of cold snare polypectomy and risk of incomplete resection

Oliver Cronin,David Kirszenblat,Nauzer Forbes,Sunil Gupta,Anthony Whitfield, Timothy O'Sullivan,Julia Gauci, Muhammad Abuarisha,Hunter Wang, Nicholas G. Burgess,Eric Y. T. Lee, Stephen J. Williams,Michael J. Bourke

ENDOSCOPY(2024)

引用 0|浏览5
暂无评分
摘要
Background Cold snare polypectomy (CSP) is safer than and equally efficacious as hot snare polypectomy (HSP) for the removal of small (<10mm) colorectal polyps. The maximum polyp size that can be effectively managed by piecemeal CSP (p-CSP) without an excessive burden of recurrence is unknown. Methods Resection error risks (RERs), defined as the estimated likelihood of incomplete removal of adenomatous tissue for a single snare resection pass, for CSP and HSP were calculated, based on an incomplete resection rate. Polyp area, snare size, estimated number of resections, and optimal resection defect area were modeled. Overall risk of incomplete resection (RIR) was defined as RIR=1 - (1 - p)(n), where p is the RER and n the number of resections. Results A 40-mm polyp has a four times greater area than a 20-mm polyp (314.16mm 2 vs. 1256.64mm(2) ), and requires three times more resections (11 vs. 33, respectively, assuming 8-mm piecemeal resection pieces for p-CSP). RIRs for a 40-mm polyp by HSP and p-CSP were 15.1%-23% and 40.74%-60.60% respectively. Conclusion RER is more important with p-CSP than with HSP. The number of resections, n, and consequently RIR increases with increasing polyp size. Given the overwhelming safety of CSP, specific techniques to minimize the RER should be studied and developed.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要