TY - JOUR
T1 - Quality of bowel cleansing for afternoon colonoscopy is influenced by time of administration
AU - Gurudu, Suryakanth R.
AU - Ratuapli, Shiva
AU - Heigh, Russell
AU - Dibaise, John
AU - Leighton, Jonathan
AU - Crowell, Michael
PY - 2010/11/1
Y1 - 2010/11/1
N2 - Objectives: Afternoon colonoscopies have higher failure rates, due primarily to poor bowel cleansing. Hypothesizing that the time of administration influences the quality of bowel cleansing, we compared the quality of bowel cleansing for afternoon colonoscopies in patients completing the preparation on the same day vs. the day before colonoscopy. Methods: Data on afternoon colonoscopies performed between July 2008 and April 2009 were obtained from our endoscopy database. Bowel-preparation options were 4L polyethylene glycol (PEG) or 2L PEG plus four bisacodyl tablets. Patients could take the preparation on the same day as the procedure or the day prior, or consume half the day prior and half the same day. Bowel-cleansing quality was reported as excellent, good, fair-adequate, inadequate, or poor. Multivariate logistic regression analysis evaluated the association between quality of bowel cleansing and time of preparation administration. Results: Bowel cleansing was reported as poor or inadequate in 7% of patients, adequate in 63%, and good or excellent in 30%. Afternoon colonoscopies using the same-day 4L PEG preparation were 3.14 times more likely to have fair-adequate cleansing and 7.03 times more likely to have good or excellent cleansing when compared with the other options. Conclusions: Same-day 4L PEG preparation for afternoon colonoscopy confers better-quality cleansing than prior-day preparation.
AB - Objectives: Afternoon colonoscopies have higher failure rates, due primarily to poor bowel cleansing. Hypothesizing that the time of administration influences the quality of bowel cleansing, we compared the quality of bowel cleansing for afternoon colonoscopies in patients completing the preparation on the same day vs. the day before colonoscopy. Methods: Data on afternoon colonoscopies performed between July 2008 and April 2009 were obtained from our endoscopy database. Bowel-preparation options were 4L polyethylene glycol (PEG) or 2L PEG plus four bisacodyl tablets. Patients could take the preparation on the same day as the procedure or the day prior, or consume half the day prior and half the same day. Bowel-cleansing quality was reported as excellent, good, fair-adequate, inadequate, or poor. Multivariate logistic regression analysis evaluated the association between quality of bowel cleansing and time of preparation administration. Results: Bowel cleansing was reported as poor or inadequate in 7% of patients, adequate in 63%, and good or excellent in 30%. Afternoon colonoscopies using the same-day 4L PEG preparation were 3.14 times more likely to have fair-adequate cleansing and 7.03 times more likely to have good or excellent cleansing when compared with the other options. Conclusions: Same-day 4L PEG preparation for afternoon colonoscopy confers better-quality cleansing than prior-day preparation.
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U2 - 10.1038/ajg.2010.235
DO - 10.1038/ajg.2010.235
M3 - Article
C2 - 21048676
AN - SCOPUS:78149235596
SN - 0002-9270
VL - 105
SP - 2318
EP - 2322
JO - American Journal of Gastroenterology
JF - American Journal of Gastroenterology
IS - 11
ER -