# Optical Imaging Technologies and Clinical Applications in Gastrointestinal Endoscopy

**Authors:** Khyati Bidani, Vishali Moond, Madhvi Nagar, Arkady Broder, Nirav Thosani

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics15202625 · Diagnostics · 2025-10-17

## TL;DR

This review discusses how optical imaging technologies improve gastrointestinal endoscopy by enhancing visualization and aiding in the detection of various diseases, with some techniques being widely accepted and others still under investigation.

## Contribution

The paper provides a critical evaluation of both established and investigational optical imaging techniques in gastrointestinal endoscopy, highlighting their diagnostic performance and practical challenges.

## Key findings

- Narrow-band imaging (NBI) is guideline-endorsed for Barrett’s esophagus and early gastric cancer detection.
- Dye-spray chromoendoscopy is the reference standard for dysplasia surveillance in inflammatory bowel disease.
- Capsule endoscopy remains the standard for small bowel evaluation, with emerging technologies like AI-assisted interpretation showing promise.

## Abstract

Optical imaging technologies expand gastrointestinal endoscopy beyond white-light endoscopy (WLE), improving visualization of mucosal, vascular, and subsurface features. They are applied to the detection of neoplastic and premalignant lesions, inflammatory diseases, and small bowel and pancreatic disorders, though their validation and readiness for routine practice vary. This review critically evaluates both guideline-endorsed and investigational optical imaging techniques across major gastrointestinal indications, highlighting diagnostic performance, level of validation, current guideline recommendations, and practical challenges to adoption. In Barrett’s esophagus, narrow-band imaging (NBI) is guideline-endorsed, while acetic acid chromoendoscopy is validated in expert centers. For gastric intestinal metaplasia and early gastric cancer, magnifying NBI achieves diagnostic accuracies exceeding 90% and is guideline-recommended, with acetic acid chromoendoscopy aiding in margin delineation. In inflammatory bowel disease, dye-spray chromoendoscopy is the reference standard for dysplasia surveillance, with virtual methods such as NBI, FICE, and i-SCAN serving as practical alternatives when dye application is not feasible. In the colorectum, NBI supports validated optical diagnosis strategies (resect-and-discard, diagnose-and-leave), while dye-based chromoendoscopy improves detection of flat and serrated lesions. Capsule endoscopy remains the standard for small bowel evaluation of bleeding, Crohn’s disease, and tumors, with virtual enhancement, intelligent chromo capsule endoscopy, and AI-assisted interpretation emerging as promising adjuncts. Pancreaticobiliary applications of optical imaging are also advancing, though current evidence is still preliminary. Investigational modalities including confocal laser endomicroscopy, optical coherence tomography, autofluorescence, Raman spectroscopy, and fluorescence molecular imaging show potential but remain largely restricted to research or expert settings. Guideline-backed modalities such as NBI and dye-based chromoendoscopy are established for clinical practice and supported by robust evidence, whereas advanced techniques remain investigational. Future directions will rely on broader validation, integration of artificial intelligence, and adoption of molecularly targeted probes and next-generation capsule technologies, which together may enhance accuracy, efficiency, and standardization in gastrointestinal endoscopy.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Barrett’s esophagus (MONDO:0013662), inflammatory bowel disease (MONDO:0005265), Crohn’s disease (MONDO:0005011)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** gastric cancer (MESH:D013274), bleeding (MESH:D006470), dysplasia (MESH:D015792), Crohn's disease (MESH:D003424), lesions (MESH:D009059), inflammatory diseases (MESH:D007249), tumors (MESH:D009369), Barrett's esophagus (MESH:D001471), small bowel and pancreatic disorders (MESH:D010195), inflammatory bowel disease (MESH:D015212)
- **Chemicals:** acetic acid (MESH:D019342)

## Full text

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## References

137 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12563889/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12563889