Preclinical and Clinical Evaluation of a Novel, Variable-View, Rigid Endoscope for Female Cystoscopy

Urology. 2020 Aug:142:231-236. doi: 10.1016/j.urology.2020.04.094. Epub 2020 May 8.

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the preclinical and clinical performance of the pivoting lens rigid Endocameleon (ECAM) endoscope in white light cystoscopy (WLC).

Materials and methods: Preclinical evaluation was performed ex vivo in CT-based, anatomically accurate and validated bladder phantoms. Six defined tasks with objective endpoints were compared between ECAM-WLC and rigid WLC (30° view angle, rWLC) in 30 interventions. Subsequently, the comparison was transferred to in vivo n = 21 interventions. A validated usability score (System Usability Scale, SUS) as well as physician and patient-related outcomes were assessed using Likert-scale-based questionnaires. Intra- and postinterventional complications were recorded according to the Clavien-Dindo classification.

Results: The ex vivo evaluation showed a significant superiority of ECAM-WLC in 4 of 6 endoscopic tasks. Noteworthy is the lower pressure on the bladder neck due to the endoscopesalteration of the endoscope (4/60 vs 17/60, P <.0001) and a more precise imaging of all bladder regions (22/30 vs 30/30, P = .046), including the anterior wall (0/30 vs 28/30, P <.0001). In vivo, surgeons rated the ECAM-WLC with an "excellent" SUS of 86.79%, also expressing that ECAM-WLC would enhance bladder surface visualization (4.52/5.0 ± 0.51), with a preferred use for ECAM-WLC during their next cystoscopy (4.62 ± 0.50). Patients reported ECAM-WLC to be less painful (4.5/5.0 ± 0.84) compared to rWLC. No intervention-related complications were observed.

Conclusion: ECAM-WLC is a safe and accessible procedure that could improve conventional diagnostic WLC by combination of the advantages of fWLC and rWLC.

Publication types

  • Evaluation Study

MeSH terms

  • Cystoscopes*
  • Cystoscopy / instrumentation*
  • Equipment Design
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Phantoms, Imaging
  • Urinary Bladder Diseases / pathology*