Capsule endoscopy in inflammatory bowel disease


Abbreviations

CCE

colon capsule endoscopy

CECDAI

the Capsule Endoscopy Crohn’s Disease Activity Index

CTE

computed tomographic enterography

GI

gastrointestinal

IBD

inflammatory bowel disease

MRE

magnetic resonance enterography

SBC

small bowel and colon

NSAID

nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug

SITT

small bowel transit time

VCE

video capsule endoscopy

UC

ulcerative colitis

Introduction

Video capsule endoscopy (VCE) was cleared for the diagnosis of small bowel disease, especially for obscure gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding, by the United States Food and Drug Administration in 2001. Various formats of VCE have been developed, including conventional VCE of the small bowel or colon, and wide-angle panoramic, panenteric, and small bowel and colon (SBC)–VCE . With advances in imaging technology, the already highly sensitive VCE in the detection of small bowel disease still suffers from suboptimal specificity .

The parameters of various capsule endoscopies are compared in Table 17.1 . VCE provides a noninvasive method to visualize the small intestine via high-quality images in patients with a wide spectrum of disorders such as Crohn’s disease (CD), ulcerative colitis (UC), ileal pouch disorders, obscure GI bleeding, polyposis syndromes, celiac disease, small bowel tumors, and other inflammatory disorders.

Table 17.1
Capsule endoscopes: small bowel, colon, and patency capsule.
Manufacturer Size (mm) Field of view (degrees) Image capture Battery life (h) Data transmission
PillCam SB Given Imaging, Yoqneam, Israel 11.4×26.3 156 2–6 fps 12 RF
Endocapsule MAJ-I469 Olympus Medical Systems, Tokyo, Japan 1.0×26.0 145 2 fps 8 RF
OMOM Jinshan Science and Technology, Chongqing, China 13.4×17.9 140 2 fps 8 RF
MiroCam IntroMedic, Seoul, Korea 10.8×24.5 170 3 fps 12 EFP
CapsoCam SV1 Capsovision Saratoga, United States 11×31 360 20 fps 15 Capsule retrieved then USB download
PillCam Patency Given Imaging, Yoqneam, Israel 11×26 n/a n/a n/a n/a
PillCam Colon Given Imaging, Yoqneam, Israel 11×32 172 6 fpm, stomach; 4–35 fps, SB 10 n/a
AKE-1 Ankon Technologies 11.8×27.0 140 2 fps 8 RF
EFP , Electrical field propagation; fps , frames per second; fpm , frames per minute; RF , radiofrequency; SB , small bowel; USB , universal serial bus.

Crohn’s disease

CD is a chronic inflammatory disease that can involve the entire GI tract, from the mouth to the anus. Small bowel involvement occurs in more than 50% of patients with CD. According to the current guidelines , VCE has been recommended as an adjunct endoscopic modality. VCE is indicated for suspected, known, or relapsed CD when ileocolonoscopy and imaging studies are not feasible or conclusive. In addition to diagnosis and differential diagnosis, VCE can also be used in monitoring disease activity and response to treatment as well as evaluating postoperative recurrence of CD . VCE can reliably assess mucosal healing ( Fig. 17.1 ).

Figure 17.1, Documentation of mucosal healing in Crohn’s disease after therapy with infliximab. (A) Ulcerated and nodular small bowel mucosa before the medical treatment and (B) resolution of mucosal inflammation (i.e., mucosal healing) with the formation of pseudopolyps after therapy ( blue arrows ).

Routine small bowel imaging or the use of the patency capsule prior to capsule endoscopy is not recommended in patients with CD . However, in patients with obstructive symptoms or known stenoses, dedicated small bowel cross-sectional imaging modalities such as magnetic resonance enterography (MRE) or computed tomography enterography (CTE) should be performed first. Capsule endoscopy is normally not recommended in patients with chronic abdominal pain or diarrhea.

The common features of CD on VCE include edema, hyperemia, bleeding, exudates, aphthae, erosions, small (≤0.5 cm) and large (>0.5 cm) ulcers, denuded mucosa, and pseudopolyps. The shape of ulcers can be round, linear, circumferential, or stellate ( Figs. 17.2 and 17.3 ). VCE may also detect the primary (i.e., disease associated) or secondary (e.g., anastomotic or drug induced) strictures ( Fig. 17.4 ). The disease can be patchy, segmental, or diffuse. Two scoring systems are used to assess the activity of small intestine mucos, based on the type, location, and severity of small bowel lesions: the Lewis score and the Capsule Endoscopy Crohn's Disease Activity Index (CECDAI). These scoring systems facilitate the assessment of the course of small bowel CD and response to medical therapy. It should be noted that these scoring systems can quantitatively describe the type, distribution, and severity of mucosal lesions, but they cannot be used as initial diagnostic tools. The CECDAI is the sum of the respective scores for the proximal and distal segments of the small bowel in which the segments are defined by the small bowel transit time (SITT) of the capsule. The total score of each segment, proximal or distal, is the sum of the stricture score and the product of the scores for inflammation and extent of disease for that bowel segment. Thus the CECDAI score is based on the inflammation, extent of disease, and presence of strictures of the proximal or distal segments of the small bowel ( Table 17.2 ) .

Figure 17.2, Patterns of small bowel Crohn’s disease on capsule endoscopy. (A) Normal small bowel mucosa as a reference; (B) edema with the villous width is equal to or greater than the villous height; (C) erythema; (D) aphthous ulcer; (E) stellate ulcer with bleeding; and (F) large, clean-based ulcer with exudates.

Figure 17.3, Patterns of small bowel inflammation in Crohn’s disease on video capsule endoscopy. (A) Mild mucosal edema; (B) patchy erythema with granularity of mucosa; (C) mixed edema and ulceration ( black arrow ); and (D–F) longitudinal ulcers with exudates ( arrows ).

Figure 17.4, Patterns of small bowel strictures in IBD on video capsule endoscopy. (A) Nodular mucosa blocking the lumen of bowel; (B) ulcerated stricture with proximal bowel edema; (C) nonulcerated fibrotic stricture; (D) anastomotic stricture with staples; (E) ulcerated stricture with exudates; and (F) retained capsule in the distal ileum viewed with ileocolonoscopy. IBD , Inflammatory bowel disease.

Table 17.2
Capsule endoscopy Crohn’s disease activity index worksheet. a
Proximal Distal
Score
A Inflammation None 0
Mild-to-moderate edema/hyperemia/denudation 1
Severe edema/hyperemia/denudation 2
Bleeding, exudate, aphthae, erosion, small ulcer (≤0.5 cm) 3
Moderate ulcer (0.5–2 cm), pseudopolyp 4
Large ulcer (>2 cm) 5
B Extent of disease None 0
Focal disease (single segment) 1
Patchy disease (multiple segments) 2
Diffuse disease 3
C Stricture b None 0
Single passed 1
Multiple passed 2
Obstruction 3

a Total score=[( A × B )+ C ] proximal +[( A × B )+ C ] distal .

b Narrowing.

In 2008 a capsule endoscopy scoring index, also named as the Lewis score, was proposed by Gralnek et al. . The Lewis score is a cumulative scoring system that is based on the presence and distribution of villous edema, ulceration, and stenosis . A score <135 is defined as normal or clinically insignificant mucosal inflammatory change. A score between 135 and 790 is mild, and a score ≥790 is moderate to severe ( Table 17.3 ) .

Table 17.3
Parameters and weightings for the capsule endoscopy scoring index (the Lewis score) .
Parameters Number Longitudinal extent Descriptors
First tertile Villous appearance Normal—0 Short segment—8 Single—1
Edematous—1 Long segment—12 Patchy—14
While tertile—20 Diffuse—17
Ulcer None—0 Short segment—5 <1/4—9
Single—3 Long segment—10 1/4–1/2—12
Few—5 Whole tertile—15 >1/2—18
Multiple—10
Second tertile Villous appearance Normal—0 Short segment—8 Single—1
Edematous—1 Long segment—12 Patchy—14
While tertile—20 Diffuse—17
Ulcer None—0 Short segment—5 <1/4—9
Single—3 Long segment—10 1/4–1/2—12
Few—5 Whole tertile—15 >1/2—18
Multiple—10
Third tertile Villous appearance Normal—0 Short segment—8 Single—1
Edematous—1 Long segment—12 Patchy—14
While tertile—20 Diffuse—17
Ulcer None—0 Short segment—5 <1/4—9
Single—3 Long segment—10 1/4–1/2—12
Few—5 Whole tertile—15 >1/2—18
Multiple—10
Stenosis a None—0 Ulcerated—24 Traversed—7
Single—14 Nonulcerated—2 Nontraversed—10
Multiple—20
Lewis score=score of the worst affected tertile [(villous parameter×extent×descriptor)+(ulcer number×extent×size)]+stenosis score (number×ulcerated×traversed).
Longitudinal extent: Short segment: <10% of the tertile; long segment: 11%–50% of the tertile; whole tertile: >50% of the tertile.
Ulcer number: single: 1; few: 2–7; multiple: ≥8.
Ulcer descriptor (size) is determined by how much of the capsule picture is filled by the largest ulcer.

a Rated for the whole study.

It is difficult for VCE to differentiate CD from nonspecific small lesions or other diseases such as lymphoma, ischemic bowel, small bowel tuberculosis, or drug-induced enteropathy, nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) in particular ( Fig. 17.5 ). NSAIDs should be discontinued at least 4 weeks prior to small bowel capsule endoscopy in the setting of suspected CD. As a screening tool for CD, capsule endoscopy has high sensitivity and low specificity but is not recommended for determining the initial diagnosis . Rather, the initial diagnosis should be based on clinical features, serum parameters, imaging conventional endoscopy, histology, and sometimes response to medical therapy. Endoscopic mucosal healing has been established as an important target for the treatment of CD as well as UC. In addition to conventional ileocolonoscopy, VCE has been shown to be effective for the measurement with mucosal healing .

Figure 17.5, Small bowel lesions mimicking inflammatory bowel disease. (A) Lymphoma with irregular and bleeding ulcers with exudates ( blue arrows ); (B) lymphoma with multiple small and punched-out ulcers ( blue arrows ); (C and D) Henoch–Schonlein purpura with mucosal nodularity and spontaneous bleeding; and (E and F) nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug-induced enteropathy with ulcerated diaphragm-like strictures in the small bowel.

You're Reading a Preview

Become a Clinical Tree membership for Full access and enjoy Unlimited articles

Become membership

If you are a member. Log in here