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Spots Global Cancer Trial Database for Artificial Intelligence for Diminutive Polyp Characterization

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Trial Identification

Brief Title: Artificial Intelligence for Diminutive Polyp Characterization

Official Title: Efficacy and Cost-effectiveness of an Artificial Intelligence System (GI-Genius) on the Characterization of Diminutive Colorectal Polyps Within a Colorectal Cancer Screening Program: a Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial (ODDITY Trial)

Study ID: NCT05391477

Study Description

Brief Summary: Artificial intelligence is a promising tool that may have a role in characterizing colon epithelial lesions (CADx), helping to get a reliable optical diagnosis regardless of the endoscopist experience. Performances of the different CADx systems are variable but it seems that, in most cases, high accuracy and sensitivities are achieved. However, these CADx systems have been developed and validated using still pictures or videos, and a real-world accurate test is lacking. No clinical trials have tested this technology in clinical practice and, therefore, performance in real colonoscopies, practical problems, applicability, and cost are unknown.

Detailed Description: The resect-and-discard (R\&D) and diagnose-and-leave (D\&L) strategies have been proposed as a means to reduce costs in the evaluation of colorectal polyps avoiding a substantial number of pathology evaluations. A pre-requisite for this paradigm shift is an accurate optical diagnosis (HOD). However, performance results for HOD have been highly variable among endoscopists representing a barrier for the adoption of the R\&D and the D\&L strategies. Artificial intelligence is a promising tool that may have a role in characterizing colon epithelial lesions (CADx), helping to get a reliable optical diagnosis regardless of the endoscopist experience. Performances of the different CADx systems are variable but it seems that, in most cases, high accuracy and sensitivities are achieved. However, these CADx systems have been developed and validated using still pictures or videos, and a real-world accurate test is lacking. No clinical trials have tested this technology in clinical practice and, therefore, performance in real colonoscopies, practical problems, applicability, and cost are unknown. Methods and analysis: The ODDITY trial is a European multicenter randomized, parallel-group superiority trial comparing GI-Genius artificial intelligence optical diagnosis (AIOD) to human optical diagnosis (HOD) of colon lesions ≤ 5 mm performed by endoscopists, using histopathology as the gold standard. A total of 643 patients attending a colonoscopy within a CRC screening program (either FIT- or colonoscopy-based) or because of post-polypectomy surveillance will be randomized to the ADI group or the HOD (control) group. A computer-generated 1:1 blocking randomization scheme stratified for center and endoscopist will be used.

Eligibility

Minimum Age:

Eligible Ages: CHILD, ADULT, OLDER_ADULT

Sex: ALL

Healthy Volunteers: No

Locations

Hospital Universitari i Politècnic La Fe, Valencia, , Spain

Contact Details

Name: Marco Bustamante Balén, M.D., Ph.D.

Affiliation: Hospital Universitario La Fe

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Useful links and downloads for this trial

Clinicaltrials.gov

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