Litcius/Paper detail

Educational nurse-led telephone intervention shortly before colonoscopy as a salvage strategy after previous bowel preparation failure: a multicenter randomized trial

Marco Antonio Álvarez, Miguel Ángel Pantaleón Sánchez, Belén Bernad Cabredo, Ana García‐Rodríguez, Santiago Frago Larramona, Óscar Nogales, Pilar Díez‐Redondo, Ignasi Puig del Castillo, Cristina Romero Mascarell, Noemí Caballero, Ivan Romero Sánchez‐Miguel, Rocío Pérez Berbegal, Domingo Hernández Negrín, Gema Bujedo Sadornill, Alicia Pérez Oltra, Gemma Casals Urquiza, Jaume Amorós Martínez, Agustín Seoane, I.A. Ibáñez Zafón, Antonio Z. Gimeno‐García

2020Endoscopy28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background The most important predictor of unsuccessful bowel preparation is previous failure. For those patients with previous failure, we hypothesized that a nurse-led educational intervention by telephone shortly before the colonoscopy appointment could improve cleansing efficacy. Methods We performed a multicenter, endoscopist-blinded, randomized controlled trial. Consecutive outpatients with previous inadequate bowel preparation were enrolled. Both groups received the same standard bowel preparation protocol. The intervention group also received reinforced education by telephone within 48 hours before the colonoscopy. The primary outcome was effective bowel preparation according to the Boston Bowel Preparation Scale. Intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis included all randomized patients. Per-protocol analysis included patients who could be contacted by telephone and the control cases. Results 657 participants were recruited by 11 Spanish hospitals. In the ITT analysis, there was no significant difference between the intervention and control groups in the rate of successful bowel preparation (77.3 % vs. 72 %; P = 0.12). In the intervention group, 267 patients (82.9 %) were contacted by telephone. Per-protocol analysis revealed significantly improved bowel preparation in the intervention group (83.5 % vs. 72.0 %; P = 0.001). Conclusion Among all patients with previous inadequate bowel preparation, nurse-led telephone education did not result in a significant improvement in bowel cleansing. However, in the 83 % of patients who could be contacted, bowel preparation was substantially improved. Phone education may therefore be a useful tool for improving the quality of bowel preparation in those cases.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineRandomized controlled trialColonoscopyBowel preparationIntention-to-treat analysisTelephone callIntervention (counseling)RandomizationClinical trialSurgeryInternal medicineColorectal cancerNursingCancerEngineeringElectrical engineeringColorectal Cancer Screening and DetectionMedical Device Sterilization and DisinfectionEnhanced Recovery After Surgery
Educational nurse-led telephone intervention shortly before colonoscopy as a salvage strategy after previous bowel preparation failure: a multicenter randomized trial | Litcius