4.5 Article

Pilot study of a new freely available computer-aided polyp detection system in clinical practice

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COLORECTAL DISEASE
Volume 37, Issue 6, Pages 1349-1354

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00384-022-04178-8

Keywords

Colonoscopy; Polyp; Artificial intelligence; Deep learning; CADe

Funding

  1. Projekt DEAL
  2. state government of Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany (Funding cluster Forum Gesundheitsstandort Baden-Wurttemberg) [5409.0-001.01/15]
  3. IZKF Wurzburg [F-406]
  4. Bavarian Center for Cancer Research (BZKF)

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This study presents the first clinical experiences of a publicly available CADe system named EndoMind for data acquisition and real-time polyp detection. The system showed high usability and accuracy when used with different endoscopy processors in clinical routine.
Purpose Computer-aided polyp detection (CADe) systems for colonoscopy are already presented to increase adenoma detection rate (ADR) in randomized clinical trials. Those commercially available closed systems often do not allow for data collection and algorithm optimization, for example regarding the usage of different endoscopy processors. Here, we present the first clinical experiences of a, for research purposes publicly available, CADe system. Methods We developed an end-to-end data acquisition and polyp detection system named EndoMind. Examiners of four centers utilizing four different endoscopy processors used EndoMind during their clinical routine. Detected polyps, ADR, time to first detection of a polyp (TFD), and system usability were evaluated (NCT05006092). Results During 41 colonoscopies, EndoMind detected 29 of 29 adenomas in 66 of 66 polyps resulting in an ADR of 41.5%. Median TFD was 130 ms (95%-CI, 80-200 ms) while maintaining a median false positive rate of 2.2% (95%-CI, 1.7-2.8%). The four participating centers rated the system using the System Usability Scale with a median of 96.3 (95%-CI, 70-100). Conclusion EndoMind's ability to acquire data, detect polyps in real-time, and high usability score indicate substantial practical value for research and clinical practice. Still, clinical benefit, measured by ADR, has to be determined in a prospective randomized controlled trial.

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