# Advancing Virtual Colonoscopy for Early Cancer Screening

> **NIH NIH R01** · STATE UNIVERSITY NEW YORK STONY BROOK · 2020 · $285,084

## Abstract

Colorectal carcinoma (CRC) remains the third most commonly diagnosed cancer and the second leading cause
of death from cancer for both man and women in the United States. Often it is diagnosed at an advanced stage,
after the patient has developed symptoms, explaining its high mortality rate. Fortunately, most CRC are
preventable because they arise from colorectal polyps over a 5 to 15 year period of malignant transformation
and, therefore, screening programs to detect and remove the polyps (or precursor) during the transformation
period have been advocated for cancer prevention. Unfortunately many people (at present time, more than
35% of the population, a very high rate for the high CRC incidence) do not follow the recommendation and, on
the other hand, many of the screened people are either under- or over-diagnosed for several reasons related to
the limitations of currently available screening methods. The health relatedness of this project is to advance a
convenient, nearly risk-free screening method, called computed tomography (CT)-based virtual colonoscopy
(VC) or CT colonography (CTC), to overcome the limitations.
 Optical colonoscopy (OC) is currently the gold standard for detection and removal of the polyps. Because
OC is somehow too invasive, compliance to recommendation with OC screening would remain a concern.
Furthermore, OC would demand a great resource to screen the large population as recommended with age over
50 and, therefore, would not be an optimal primary screening test. On the other hand, stool-based tests (e.g.
fecal blood or DNA tests) are easy to perform but have a very low detectability. We have been the pioneers in
developing CTC as a minimal-invasive cost-effective method to relieve the burden of OC for the screening
purpose and have shown its comparable performance to OC on detection of polyps with size 8mm and larger.
We understand very well on the two major concerns on the current CT radiation level and the current CTC
inconsistency in detecting small polyps (<10mm), which were discussed by the expert panel if CTC is ready as
massive screening for Medicare coverage. We have deep insight on CTC potential beyond the detection task
for characterizing Hyperplastic (no-risk) vs. Adenoma (risk) polyps for personalized optimal polyp treatment.
This proposal intends to relieve the concerns and bring the current CTC detection-only paradigm up to a new
level of not only detecting polyps, but also characterizing the detected polyps at the screening stage via the
following two specific aims: (1). To develop and evaluate adaptive image reconstruction methods to retain
adequate image quality (particularly to enhance image textures) for polyp detection and characterization with
as low as achievable CT radiation. (2). To explore and evaluate image texture features as imaging biomarkers
to detect polyps and characterize polyp subtypes.
 We hypothesize that the above specific aims will advance CTC to be a cost-effective screening test...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10003179
- **Project number:** 5R01CA206171-05
- **Recipient organization:** STATE UNIVERSITY NEW YORK STONY BROOK
- **Principal Investigator:** Zhengrong Jerome Liang
- **Activity code:** R01 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $285,084
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2016-06-03 → 2022-12-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10003179

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10003179, Advancing Virtual Colonoscopy for Early Cancer Screening (5R01CA206171-05). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-25 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10003179. Licensed CC0.

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