A prospective randomized controlled trial of water exchange plus cap versus water exchange colonoscopy in unsedated Veterans.

insertion pain unsedated colonoscopy water exchange colonoscopy

Journal

Gastrointestinal endoscopy
ISSN: 1097-6779
Titre abrégé: Gastrointest Endosc
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0010505

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
23 Jul 2024
Historique:
received: 19 12 2023
revised: 17 05 2024
accepted: 08 07 2024
medline: 26 7 2024
pubmed: 26 7 2024
entrez: 25 7 2024
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

Water exchange (WE) and cap-assisted colonoscopy (CAC) separately reduced pain during insertion in unsedated patients. We hypothesized that compared with WE, WECAC could significantly lower real-time maximum insertion pain (RTMIP). Veterans without escort were recruited, randomized, blinded, and examined at three United States Veterans Affairs sites. The primary outcome was RTMIP, highest segmental pain (0 = no pain, 10 = most severe pain) during insertion. Randomization [WECAC (n = 143) and WE (n = 137)] produced even distribution of a racially diverse group of males and females of low socioeconomic status. Intention-to-treat analysis reported results of WECAC (listed first) and WE (listed second): cecal intubation [93%, 94.2%]; mean (SD) of RTMIP [2.9 (2.5), 2.6 (2.4)]; the proportion with no pain (28.7%, 27.7%); the insertion time [18.6 (15.6), 18.8 (15.9) min]; overall ADR (55.2%, 62.8%), all P values were > 0.05. When RTMIP was binarized as "no pain" (0) vs. "some pain" (1-10), or "low pain" (0-7) vs. "high pain" (8-10), different significant predictors (see text) of RTMIP were identified. Unsedated colonoscopy was appropriate for unescorted Veterans. WE alone was sufficient. Adding a cap did not reduce RTMIP. Patient specific factors and application of WE with insertion suction of infused water contributed to high and low RTMIP, respectively. For unesorted patients, selecting those with low anxiety, avoiding low body mass index, history of depression or self-reported poor health and adhering to the steps of WE can minimize RTMIP to ensure success of unsedated colonoscopy.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND AND AIMS OBJECTIVE
Water exchange (WE) and cap-assisted colonoscopy (CAC) separately reduced pain during insertion in unsedated patients. We hypothesized that compared with WE, WECAC could significantly lower real-time maximum insertion pain (RTMIP).
METHODS METHODS
Veterans without escort were recruited, randomized, blinded, and examined at three United States Veterans Affairs sites. The primary outcome was RTMIP, highest segmental pain (0 = no pain, 10 = most severe pain) during insertion.
RESULTS RESULTS
Randomization [WECAC (n = 143) and WE (n = 137)] produced even distribution of a racially diverse group of males and females of low socioeconomic status. Intention-to-treat analysis reported results of WECAC (listed first) and WE (listed second): cecal intubation [93%, 94.2%]; mean (SD) of RTMIP [2.9 (2.5), 2.6 (2.4)]; the proportion with no pain (28.7%, 27.7%); the insertion time [18.6 (15.6), 18.8 (15.9) min]; overall ADR (55.2%, 62.8%), all P values were > 0.05. When RTMIP was binarized as "no pain" (0) vs. "some pain" (1-10), or "low pain" (0-7) vs. "high pain" (8-10), different significant predictors (see text) of RTMIP were identified.
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
Unsedated colonoscopy was appropriate for unescorted Veterans. WE alone was sufficient. Adding a cap did not reduce RTMIP. Patient specific factors and application of WE with insertion suction of infused water contributed to high and low RTMIP, respectively. For unesorted patients, selecting those with low anxiety, avoiding low body mass index, history of depression or self-reported poor health and adhering to the steps of WE can minimize RTMIP to ensure success of unsedated colonoscopy.

Identifiants

pubmed: 39053653
pii: S0016-5107(24)03356-X
doi: 10.1016/j.gie.2024.07.010
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2024 American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Auteurs

Felix W Leung (FW)

VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, UCLA. Electronic address: felix.leung@va.gov.

Ramsey Cheung (R)

VA Palo Alto Healthcare System, Stanford University.

Shai Friedland (S)

VA Palo Alto Healthcare System, Stanford University.

Noam Jacob (N)

VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, UCLA.

Joseph W Leung (JW)

VA Northern California Healthcare System, UC Davis.

Jennifer Y Pan (JY)

VA Palo Alto Healthcare System, Stanford University.

Susan Y Quan (SY)

VA Northern California Healthcare System, UC Davis.

James Sul (J)

VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, UCLA.

Andrew W Yen (AW)

VA Northern California Healthcare System, UC Davis.

Nora Jamgotchian (N)

VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, UCLA.

Yu Chen (Y)

VA Palo Alto Healthcare System, Stanford University.

Vivek Dixit (V)

VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, UCLA.

Aliya Shaikh (A)

VA Northern California Healthcare System, UC Davis.

David Elashoff (D)

VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, UCLA.

Saha Angshuman (S)

VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, UCLA.

Holly Wilhalme (H)

VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, UCLA.

Classifications MeSH