Litcius/Paper detail

Effectiveness of very low-volume preparation for colonoscopy: A prospective, multicenter observational study

Marcello Maida, Emanuele Sinagra, Gaetano Cristian Morreale, Sandro Sferrazza, Giuseppe Scalisi, D. Schillaci, Marco Ventimiglia, Fabio Salvatore Macaluso, G Vettori, Giuseppe Conoscenti, Concetta Di Bartolo, Serena Garufi, Domenico Catarella, M Manganaro, Clara Virgilio, S. Camilleri

2020World Journal of Gastroenterology42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The effectiveness of colonoscopy strictly depends on adequate bowel cleansing. Recently, a 1 L polyethylene glycol plus ascorbate (PEG-ASC) solution (Plenvu; Norgine, Harefield, United Kingdom) has been introduced on the evidence of three phase-3 randomized controlled trials, but it had never been tested in the real-life. AIM: To assess the effectiveness and tolerability of the 1 L preparation compared to 4 L and 2 L- PEG solutions in a real-life setting. METHODS: All patients undergoing a screening or diagnostic colonoscopy after a 4, 2 or 1 L PEG preparation, were consecutively enrolled in 5 Italian centers from September 2018 to February 2019. The primary endpoints of the study were the assessment of bowel cleansing success and high-quality cleansing of the right colon. The secondary endpoints were the evaluation of tolerability, adherence and safety of the different bowel preparations. Bowel cleansing was assessed through the Boston Bowel Preparation Scale. Adherence was defined as consumption of at least 75% of each dose, while tolerability was evaluated through a semi-quantitative scale. Safety was systematically monitored through adverse events reporting. RESULTS: < 0.001) for 4 L, 2 L and 1 L-PEG preparation groups, respectively. The 1 L preparation was the most tolerated compared to the 2 and 4 L-PEG solutions in the absence of serious adverse events within any of the three groups. Multiple regression models confirmed 1 L PEG-ASC preparation as an independent predictor of overall cleansing success, high-quality cleansing of the right colon and of tolerability. CONCLUSION: This study supports the effectiveness and tolerability of 1 L PEG-ASC, also showing it is an independent predictor of overall cleansing success, high-quality cleansing of the right colon and of tolerability.

Topics & Concepts

ColonoscopyMedicineTolerabilityObservational studyBowel preparationRandomized controlled trialPEG ratioMulticenter studyInternal medicineAdverse effectClinical endpointSurgeryColorectal cancerEconomicsFinanceCancerColorectal Cancer Screening and DetectionMedical Device Sterilization and DisinfectionMicroscopic Colitis