A recent study that examined regional and national trends in age-specific volumes and outcomes after ERCP in the pediatric population estimated that between 2005 and 2014, approximately 11,000 endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) procedures were carried out in children in the United States.
The new study suggests a similar relationship in pediatric patients to adults for advanced endoscopy procedures like ERCP and endoscopic ultrasound (EUS), where a strong correlation between volume and outcomes has already been established. It was found that only 5 per cent of pediatric ERCPs were carried out in rural hospitals, while 34 per cent and 60 per cent of pediatric ERCPs, were carried out in urban teaching centers and general urban centers, respectively, with significantly shorter hospitalization times than those in rural centers.
Pediatric advanced endoscopy (PAE) cases are anticipated to rise in frequency over the next few years, according to experts. Endoscopic treatment is used to treat the increased incidence of pancreatic diseases in children. Additionally, in America, the increased obesity epidemic has increased in association with biliary and gallstone in children.
The North American Society for Hepatology, Pediatric Gastroenterology, and Nutrition (NASPGHAN) established a special interest group focused on ERCP in 2014 as a result of the increase in interest in PAE.
Broad range of training paths
The majority of pediatric advanced endoscopists in practice today completed an adult fellowship program for their training. The variability in training pathways is highlighted by a recent survey of working pediatric endoscopists within NASPGHAN, which was presented at the 2021 Digestive Disease Week. 38 (92.7 per cent) of the 41 endoscopists who were surveyed responded, and 27 of them were counted in the analysis because they independently practiced ERCP (n=23) or EUS (n=13). Nine endoscopists from adult advanced endoscopy fellowship programs made up the majority of respondents (n=11), who also received training from other sources. Seven more respondents reported training that included some time with adult developed endoscopy, compared to the five additional respondents who reported training exclusively with an adult advanced endoscopist. The majority of respondents had been trained specifically in a PAE fellowship program, while the remainder had been trained in some other combination of these pathways.
Most respondents performing ERCP (85.7 per cent) and EUS (100 per cent) reported training with an adult advanced endoscopist, with less than half of respondents (46.4 per cent) training with a pediatric advanced endoscopist. Despite the low volume, the majority of respondents pediatric ERCP (82 per cent) and EUS (80 per cent), reported feeling prepared to practice independently after completing training.
The training available for PAE has become more robust. Unlike general pediatric GI or adult advanced endoscopy, there is no structured training pathway. Few children’s hospitals across the nation have signed agreements with adult sister hospitals to train pediatric endoscopists as a fourth-year fellowship coordinated by the pediatric and adult GI groups.
AI: future of Barrett’s Esophagus Surveillance
A systematic review and meta-analysis found that while artificial intelligence-based detection algorithms are not yet common in clinical practice for the surveillance of neoplasia in Barrett’s esophagus, they clearly have advantages.
In a data pool that evaluated various AI strategies and methodologies, AI was more than twice as accurate and sensitive as expert endoscopists.
Improved performance
AI-aided diagnosis will be a favorable adjunct to endoscopic surveillance for accurately detecting and treating early Barrett’s neoplasia, improving patient outcomes. Additionally, since AI systems learn from experience, their performance will only improve over time.
Many researchers used image enhancement or other technologies, like volumetric laser endomicroscopy, to speed up AI processing. AI has a high degree of sensitivity, accuracy, and specificity for detecting early Barrett’s neoplasia.
Future scope
However, AI for early Barrett’s neoplasia detection is still in its infant stage, and current systems primarily serve as proofs of concept rather than examples of how AI can be applied in everyday medical practice.
Only three data sets used real-time AI algorithms in their study, and the majority of them were used to process images from endoscopies. Before the technology is ready for widespread use in BE surveillance, classification accuracy and speed of AI systems still need to be improved, along with validation on a variety of data sets.
AI gives the possibility of real-time evaluation. The overall goal of this technology is to assist endoscopists in selecting areas to biopsy and/or treat with high confidence, avoiding the need for random biopsies and repeat treatment procedures.
Although other methods for early Barrett’s neoplasia detection may play a role in screening in particular situations, AI is in a great position to become the norm because it enables early Barrett’s neoplasia to be found and eliminated in the same procedure. AI technology will be a valuable tool in characterising and resecting neoplastic Barrett’s esophagus.
The global endoscopy devices market size in 2021 was US$30.3 billion and will reach US$56.2 billion by 2030 at a 7.1 per cent CAGR during 2021-2030. Endoscopy is accelerated by artificial intelligence (AI), robotic-assisted endoscopy, and reimbursement options. AI and future advancements in three-dimensional and four-dimensional imaging in robotic endoscopy, as well as novel suturing and dissecting devices, will drive significant advances in endoscopic surgery.
Innovation on ERCP and EUS
ERCP procedures were once performed for both diagnostic and interventional reasons. However, since the development of less invasive diagnostic techniques like EUS, ERCP has been used mostly for interventional procedures. A variety of endoscopic tools, such as stents, dilation balloons, guidewires, lithotripters, cannulas, stone removal balloons, sphincterotomes, and baskets, can be used by the doctor during the procedure.
Since the introduction of Boston Scientific’s AXIOS lumen-apposing covered-metal stent in 2016, the ERCP device market has grown significantly. One of the most recent developments in the ERCP industry is the lumen-apposing covered-metal stent market, which is indicated for transgastric or transduodenal endoscopic drainage of symptomatic pancreatic pseudocysts and walled-off necrosis under EUS imaging guidance.
The SpyGlass DS Direct Visualization System, another cutting-edge product from Boston Scientific, is a single-use cholangioscope that can be attached to a duodenoscope to provide digital visualization during an ERCP procedure. Infection control is one of the most expensive and dangerous aspects of endoscopy. In this process, scopes are manually cleaned, put through an automated endoscope reprocessor, sterilised, and then kept in a specialized drying cabinet.
Fine needle biopsy (FNB) devices are a relatively recent addition to the EUS needle market and are primarily used to sample solid tissue masses. These cutting-edge devices are now more popular on the market than fine needle aspiration (FNA) devices, which are typically used to collect cyst fluid. The Beacon FNF from Medtronic is a notable FNB device.
Article provided by Strategic Market Research
References
https://www.strategicmarketresearch.com/market-report/endoscopy-devices-market
https://singleuseendoscopy.com/here-are-the-flexible-endoscopy-trends-to-watch-in-2022