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Clinical Trial Summary

Colonoscopy( examining the colon with a flexible tube and a camera ) is usually done for screening purposes to find any precancerous lesions (polyps) at an early stage. During the colonoscopy the doctor will advance the colonoscope to the end of your colon and start examining the colon for any polyps. "Withdrawal time" is the period of time the doctor spends examining the colon. Doctors usually spend six minutes examining the colon after they reach the end of the colon. Studies have showed that spending more withdrawal time detects more lesions. The proposal to dedicating half of the withdrawal time during colonoscopy in examining the right side will increase the detection of polyps in the right side of the colon. There will be no other changes in the procedural aspect of the colonoscopy.


Clinical Trial Description

Screening colonoscopy is an essential diagnostic tool in the early detection of precancerous colonic lesions, preventing the progression of these lesions to cancer. Population-based and case control studies found a 50% reduction in colo-rectal cancer (CRC) incidence and up to a one-third reduction in mortality from CRC after screening colonoscopy. The effectiveness of colonoscopy in preventing colon cancer is dependent on the adenoma detection rate (ADR) during the procedure. Studies have demonstrated that withdrawal times of 6 minutes or more had higher rates of detection of any neoplasia. In 2006 joint task force of the American College of Gastroenterology and American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy changed the recommendation to indicate that average withdrawal time should exceed 6 minutes in normal colonoscopies in which no polypectomies or biopsies were performed. Based on this recommendation, the 6-minute benchmark is the current standard of care. Longer mean withdrawal times are associated with increasing adenoma detection, mainly of small or right-sided adenomas and proximal serrated adenomas, presumably due to longer inspection of the right colon. However, it also have been showed withdrawal time using 6 minutes as the threshold is not a strong predictor of the likelihood of finding a polyp during colonoscopy and should not be used as a quality indicator. New CRC diagnosis within 3 years of negative screening colonoscopy can be as high as 6%. Right-sided lesions, flat polyps, and variability in endoscopist quality measures are all potential reasons why interval cancers develop. A recent observational study was published showing increase in ADR after implementation of a protocol of careful inspection during a minimum of 8 minutes was established. The investigators hypothesized that if colonoscopists would spend at least half of the time of the withdrawal time in the right side of the colon (referred as segmented protocol), ADR can increase mainly due to the detection of lesions in the right side, which could have been missed otherwise. The investigators are conducting a single center randomized trial investigating the utility of timed segmental withdrawal of at least 3 minutes each in both right and left side of the colon respectively, compared to the regular 6 minutes total withdrawal time regardless of where the time was spent in the colon. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02538406
Study type Observational
Source Baylor College of Medicine
Contact
Status Terminated
Phase
Start date August 2015
Completion date April 2, 2020

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