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Trial Title:
A Multicenter Prospective Cohort Study Comparing Random Biopsies Versus Wide-Area Transepithelial Brush-Sampling (WATS) for Surveillance of Barrett's Esophagus, the WATS-EURO2 Study
NCT ID:
NCT05642338
Condition:
Barrett Esophagus
Esophageal Adenocarcinoma
Diagnosis
Conditions: Official terms:
Barrett Esophagus
Conditions: Keywords:
detection
Barrett Esophagus
WATS3D
forceps Biopsies
Dysplasia
Study type:
Observational
Overall status:
Recruiting
Study design:
Time perspective:
Prospective
Intervention:
Intervention type:
Diagnostic Test
Intervention name:
WATS3D
Description:
the WATS3D brush samples the esophagus by abresing the tissue. the brush is directed
through the workingchanel of endoscope into the oesophagus
Arm group label:
Cohort 2: non-dysplastic cohort
Arm group label:
cohort 1 dysplastic cohort
Other name:
CDxx WATS3D brush
Summary:
The investigators aim to study the rate of developing a biopsy-based diagnosis of
high-grade dysplasia (HGD) and EAC in BE patients in a prospective cohort of 208 BE
patients at high risk of progression (i.e. after endoscopic removal of visible lesions
containing HGD/EAC and/or a diagnosis of low-grade dysplasia (LGD)) as well as in 208 BE
patients with a nondysplastic BE (NDBE) undergoing standard BE surveillance. In these
patients the investigators will combine biopsy sampling with WATS at baseline and all
follow-up endoscopies during a 3- year follow-up period. This will allow us to study the
natural history of WATS-positive-biopsynegative- cases and of WATS-specific outcomes such
as basal-crypt dysplasia. The study also allows us to collect specimens for future
biomarker studies that may help to predict progression to HGD/EAC in the absence of
morphological features of dysplasia.
Detailed description:
Esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC) is a disease with a poor prognosis at advanced stages.
Identifying esophageal adenocarcinoma at an early stage allows for endoscopic treatment
to reduce mortality and morbidity for these treated patients. Adequate surveillance
strategies with appropriate risk stratification are therefore essential. The current
endoscopic surveillance protocol relies on systemic four-quadrant biopsy at 2-cm
intervals of the BE segment, with additional targeted biopsies from visible
abnormalities.
Obtaining random biopsies is time consuming, and it results at best in sampling less than
5% of the BE surface area . Thus, significant sampling error is inevitable. Sampling the
BE segment with a brush has the theoretical advantage of larger field sampling and might
therefore increase the detection of dysplasia. Conventional brush cytology samples
however, suffer from superficial sampling and difficult analysis of the thick tissue
smear by a twodimensional cytology microscope. The WATS system (developed by CDx
Diagnostics) consists of a trans-epithelial cytology brush designed to sample cells from
all three layers of the epithelium and the diagnosis of the brush specimen by advanced
computer image analysis system at CDx Diagnostics.
These advantages over conventional cytology may make this system an important diagnostic
tool in BE surveillance . In the European WATS study ("Euro-WATS1") the WATS-system was
compared with random biopsies in a cohort of patients referred with low-grade dysplasia
(LGD), high-grade dysplasia (HGD) or early cancer after removal of all visible
abnormalities. Eligible cases underwent random biopsies and WATS brushings after
randomizing the order of sampling.
The study showed no significant differences in the detection rate for HGD or EAC between
random biopsies and WATS brushings. The brush detected 39/48 HGD/EAC cases versus 30/48
for random biopsies (p=0.12). The value of the WATS-3D brush as an adjunct to random
forceps biopsies however, was 48/147 vs 30/147; difference 12%, with a number needed to
treat of 8. Moreover, the brush had a significantly shorter procedure time than random
biopsies with a larger difference in longer BE segments. Another strength of the WATS
brush, compared to random biopsies, is that it paves the way towards a preferred (future)
trans-oral sampling instead of endoscopic sampling. Key element in the adjunctive value
of WATS is the clinical relevance of "WATS-positive-biopsy-negative". One may argue that
the morphological changes of dysplasia-positive WATS samples clearly correspond to those
defining dysplasia in biopsy samples and therefore are merely different representations
of the same disease which is now diagnosed at an earlier stage. Others argue that the
WATS-system, by being more sensitive to detect dysplasia, simply dilutes the disease
reservoir with clinically less severe cases which do not warrant the same therapeutic
approach as in cases with a biopsy based diagnosis of dysplasia. The natural history of
"WATS-positive-biopsy-negative" cases can, however, not be investigated in the EUROWATS1
study because this was a transversal study with no subsequent follow-up and with the vast
majority of cases having undergone ablation therapy based on their referral diagnosis
and/or outcome of the endoscopic resection of visible lesions. Another limitation of the
EURO-WATS1 study was the relatively high rate of WATS brushings that were deemed
ineligible for assessment of the smears. In the study 23/172 (13%) of cases had
suboptimal WATS samples, despite the fact that the corresponding cellblocks showed
adequate cellularity. It appears that the logistics in the endoscopy suite and/or storage
of samples prior to transportation and evaluation at CDx may have had flaws. Therefore, a
second European WATS study ("WATS EURO 2 study") will be performed in which, after the
baseline endoscopy with WATS brushing and random biopsies, endoscopic follow-up is
continued until a biopsy-based diagnosis of HGD or cancer is made. The WATS EURO 2 study
will therefore allow us to study the natural history of WATS-positive-biopsynegative
cases, will enable us to re-evaluate the role of the WATS-3D brush as a potential
substitute for random sampling, after optimizing sample collection and preparation in the
study. Finally, the samples collected in this study will also allow us to perform future
biomarker studies on both the brush and biopsy material, to find the best sampling method
for biomarker risk stratification in the future. It is undisputed that patients referred
with LGD, HGD or early cancer should have all visible lesions removed by ER techniques.
In general, the endoscopic resection specimen will then show a diagnosis of HGD or early
cancer. Follow-up studies have shown that the chance of the development of metachronous
HGD/EAC in the remaining BE segment is about 10% per year. Therefore ablation therapy is
advised for the remaining BE segment.
The same 10% annual progression rate to HGD/EAC applies for patients with a confirmed
diagnosis of LGD. For these patients, guidelines suggest that ablation therapy may be a
valid alternative to subsequent surveillance. The actual decision to ablate the remaining
Barrett's segment after endoscopic resection of HGD/EAC or to prophylactically ablate for
LGD, is made on a per patient basis in which age and comorbidity are important additional
factors to be taken into account. Follow-up studies after ER of visible lesions
containing HGD/EAC have found that metachronous lesions are all found at an
endoscopically treatable stage with the majority of patients not developing recurrent
disease. The same holds for prophylactic ablation in cases with LGD: a significant
proportion of patients will not progress or not even manifest their baseline diagnosis of
LGD upon follow-up. In the SURF-study, 30% of the LGD-patients randomized to endoscopic
surveillance did not have their LGD diagnosis reproduced during 4 subsequent endoscopies
in 3-years follow-up and all cases that progressed to HGD/EAC were diagnosed at an
endoscopically curable stage. Furthermore, RFA still is accompanied by complications such
as esophageal stenosis and requires multiple hospital visits. Even upon complete
endoscopic eradication of all Barrett's mucosa, guidelines still dictate endoscopic
surveillance after ablation virtually at the same frequency as for Barrett's cases not
prophylactically treated. Therefore, keeping Barrett's patients under strict endoscopic
surveillance after ER of visible lesions or for flat LGD is an acceptable strategy that
does not divert from current guidelines.
In the current study, the investigators aim to study the rate of developing a
biopsy-based diagnosis of HGD/EAC in Barrett's patients at high risk of progression (i.e.
after endoscopic removal of visible lesions containing HGD/EAC and/or a diagnosis of LGD)
as well as in patients in a standard Barrett's surveillance program. In these patients
the investigators will combine biopsy sampling with WATS brushing at baseline and all
follow-up endoscopies. This will allow us to study the natural history of
WATS-positive-biopsy negative case and of WATS-specific outcomes such as basal-crypt
dysplasia, and to further evaluate the role of the WATS brush as a potential substitute
to random biopsies.
The study also allows us to collect specimens for future biomarker studies that may help
to predict progression to HGD/EAC in the absence of morphological features of dysplasia.
Criteria for eligibility:
Study pop:
Barrett Esophagus patient enrolled in a surveillance cohort
Sampling method:
Probability Sample
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
- Patients age: ≥ 18 years
- BE with a circumferential extent of ≥2cm and a total maximum extent of ≤18cm (in
case of prior ER: BE length is measured after ER). Or a circumferential extent of
0-1 cm with a maximum extent of ≥4cm.
- Cohort 1: Patients referred for work-up of IND, LGD, HGD or low-risk cancer (m1 to
sm1, without lympho-vascular invasion and poor differentiation), either diagnosed in
random biopsies or in prior endoscopic resection specimen within 18 months prior to
baseline endoscopy
- Cohort 2: Patients with known BE without a diagnosis of dysplasia in the last 18
months, enrolled in endoscopic surveillance programs
- Ability to give written, informed consent and understand the responsibilities of
participation
Exclusion Criteria:
- Patients with visible lesions according to the Paris classification at the time of
the WATS and random biopsy testing (prior endoscopic resection is allowed)
- Patients with high-risk cancer after endoscopic resection: either sm2/3 invasion,
poor differentiation, lympho-vascular invasion, or R1 vertical resection margin
- Patients within six weeks after endoscopy with biopsies and/or ER
- History of esophageal or gastric surgery other than Nissen fundoplication
- History of esophageal ablation therapy
- Presence of esophageal varices
- Subject has a known history of unresolved drug or alcohol dependency that would
limit ability to comprehend or follow instructions related to informed consent,
post-treatment instructions, or follow-up guidelines
Gender:
All
Minimum age:
18 Years
Maximum age:
N/A
Healthy volunteers:
No
Locations:
Facility:
Name:
Amsterdam University Medical Centre, loc. VUmc
Address:
City:
Amsterdam
Zip:
1081HV
Country:
Netherlands
Status:
Recruiting
Contact:
Last name:
Pim Stougie
Phone:
+31617741850
Email:
p.stougie@amsterdamumc.nl
Contact backup:
Last name:
Lucas Duits, MD PhD
Email:
l.c.duits@amsterdamumc.nl
Start date:
November 1, 2022
Completion date:
May 1, 2027
Lead sponsor:
Agency:
Academisch Medisch Centrum - Universiteit van Amsterdam (AMC-UvA)
Agency class:
Other
Source:
Academisch Medisch Centrum - Universiteit van Amsterdam (AMC-UvA)
Record processing date:
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on November 12, 2024
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov page:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05642338