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fluorescence-guided colonoscopy

Procedure: - probe consisting of a peptide that binds to c-Met is attached to a fluorescent dye - the peptide-fluorescent dye conjugate is injected IV ~ 3 hours prior to colonoscopy - c-Met is present in greater abundance on the cell surface of colorectal hyperplastic polyps & colorectal adenomas than on normal colorectal mucosa - somehow the peptide-fluorescent dye conjugate attaches to c-Met on the colorectal mucosa - near-infrared fluorescent light is used to identify the the attached peptide-fluorescent dye conjugate - normal white light is also used as in standard colonoscopy Clinical significance: - fluorescence-guided colonoscopy detects flat & nonpolypoid colorectal adenomas better than standard colonoscopy

General

colonoscopy

References

  1. Burggraaf J et al. Detection of colorectal polyps in humans using an intravenously administered fluorescent peptide targeted against c-Met. Nat Med 2015 Aug; 21:955 PMID: 26168295