Texture and Color Enhancement Imaging for the Kyoto Classification of Gastritis: Evaluation of Visibility and Color Differences.
[INTRODUCTION] The Kyoto Classification of Gastritis enables endoscopic assessment of () infection status and gastric cancer risk.
APA
Oki S, Takeda T, et al. (2026). Texture and Color Enhancement Imaging for the Kyoto Classification of Gastritis: Evaluation of Visibility and Color Differences.. DEN open, 6(1), e70297. https://doi.org/10.1002/deo2.70297
MLA
Oki S, et al.. "Texture and Color Enhancement Imaging for the Kyoto Classification of Gastritis: Evaluation of Visibility and Color Differences.." DEN open, vol. 6, no. 1, 2026, pp. e70297.
PMID
41693738
Abstract
[INTRODUCTION] The Kyoto Classification of Gastritis enables endoscopic assessment of () infection status and gastric cancer risk. Initially developed for image-enhanced endoscopy, texture and color enhancement imaging (TXI) allows us to easily distinguish differences in mucosal structure and color. The aim of this study was to evaluate the use of TXI in the visibility of endoscopic findings of gastritis.
[METHODS] This was a retrospective analysis using prospectively collected endoscopic data from a prospective, single-center study, in which 220 patients undergoing esophagogastroduodenoscopy were enrolled. Endoscopic images were obtained using both white light imaging (WLI) and TXI (TXI-1 and TXI-2). Ten endoscopists (five experts and five trainees) independently evaluated 52 matched image sets, scoring visibility on a 5-point scale. Inter-rater reliability was assessed using intraclass correlation coefficients. Objective color analysis using the CIE L*a*b* color space and ΔE* values was also performed for map-like redness.
[RESULTS] TXI-1 improved visibility for diffuse redness, spotty redness, map-like redness, patchy redness, atrophic border, red streak, and the regular arrangement of collecting venules. Visibility of intestinal metaplasia was also enhanced by TXI-1, although to a lesser extent than other findings. TXI-1 demonstrated "moderate" to "substantial" inter-rater reliability. Objective colorimetric analysis confirmed significantly greater ΔE* values with TXI-1 versus WLI for map-like redness.
[CONCLUSION] TXI-1 enhances the visibility of key endoscopic features of -associated gastritis. TXI-1 may serve as a useful tool for endoscopic assessment of -associated gastritis.
[TRIAL REGISTRATION] The study protocol was registered in the University Hospital Medical Information Network Clinical Trials Registry (UMIN000045323).
[METHODS] This was a retrospective analysis using prospectively collected endoscopic data from a prospective, single-center study, in which 220 patients undergoing esophagogastroduodenoscopy were enrolled. Endoscopic images were obtained using both white light imaging (WLI) and TXI (TXI-1 and TXI-2). Ten endoscopists (five experts and five trainees) independently evaluated 52 matched image sets, scoring visibility on a 5-point scale. Inter-rater reliability was assessed using intraclass correlation coefficients. Objective color analysis using the CIE L*a*b* color space and ΔE* values was also performed for map-like redness.
[RESULTS] TXI-1 improved visibility for diffuse redness, spotty redness, map-like redness, patchy redness, atrophic border, red streak, and the regular arrangement of collecting venules. Visibility of intestinal metaplasia was also enhanced by TXI-1, although to a lesser extent than other findings. TXI-1 demonstrated "moderate" to "substantial" inter-rater reliability. Objective colorimetric analysis confirmed significantly greater ΔE* values with TXI-1 versus WLI for map-like redness.
[CONCLUSION] TXI-1 enhances the visibility of key endoscopic features of -associated gastritis. TXI-1 may serve as a useful tool for endoscopic assessment of -associated gastritis.
[TRIAL REGISTRATION] The study protocol was registered in the University Hospital Medical Information Network Clinical Trials Registry (UMIN000045323).