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Clinical Trial Summary

A randomized controlled and endoscopist-blinded study which compares the efficacy of liquid simethicone (100mg) in 5 mls water, versus placebo ( 5mls of water), as premedication (given at least 30 minutes) before gastroscopy towards improvement of the total mucosal visibility score.


Clinical Trial Description

Excessive bubbles or foam during gastroscopy is a common problem which can cause significant hindrance to an optimal evaluation of the gastric mucosa, prolong the procedure time, and contribute to poor patient tolerance during the scope.

Simethicone, with or without N-acetylcysteine, has been extensively evaluated to improve mucosal visibility. However, the volume of simethicone preparation and the timing of ingesting this solution before gastroscope varied significantly across different studies. In general, it appeared that a larger volume of simethicone solution, given earlier before the gastroscopy, may yield better results. However, allowing a patient to ingest a large volume of liquid before a gastroscopy under sedation brings forth the risk of aspiration. A recent Taiwanese study published in 2014 [1] showed that the subgroup with 100mg of simethicone in just 5ml of water, did achieve a good total mucosal visibility score, if the solution was ingested more than 30 minutes before the gastroscope. This may be because a longer time allows the simethicone to coat more of the mucosa. However, this study did not compare this preparation against a placebo.

In Changi General Hospital, many gastroscopies are done daily with no premedication. Also, there is no protocol for premedication before gastroscopes. This study hopes to prove that a low volume of simethicone solution, given at an ample time (more than 30 minutes) before the scope, can significantly improve overall endoscopy performance compared to no premedication at all. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Investigator)


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02555228
Study type Interventional
Source Changi General Hospital
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 2/Phase 3
Start date August 2015
Completion date November 2015