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Colonoscopy: Bowel Preparation clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06317597 Enrolling by invitation - Clinical trials for Colonoscopy: Bowel Preparation

Efficacy of Short Time Intervals in Split-Dose Bowel Preparation of Oral Sulfate Solution for Colonoscopy

Start date: March 15, 2024
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

To evaluate whether oral sulfate solution administered in a short time interval (6-8 hours) between the first and last dose of laxative is not inferior to a long time interval (10-12 hours) in bowel preparation quality.

NCT ID: NCT03581175 Completed - Clinical trials for Colonoscopy: Bowel Preparation

Barriers and Breakthroughs in IMPlementing Split Regimen OVEr Single Dose

IMPROVES
Start date: September 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The split-dose regimen (SpD) has demonstrated its superiority over the day-before regimen (DB) in determining a better colon cleansing and is considered the standard bowel preparation for colonoscopies by the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ASGE) and the European Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ESGE) guidelines. However its application is still suboptimal due to concerns about patient acceptability, fluid aspiration due to residual gastric contents and challenging viability for early morning colonoscopies. Barriers precluding the prescription of SpD have been explored in few studies mainly in the setting of auditing of current practice, while corrective measure aiming at changing this practice have been prospectively tested in very few, small and selected, cohorts. The present study has the aim of surveying split-dose regimen adoption rate among several endoscopic centres before and after an improvement phase following a plan-do-study-act approach, in order to analyse and correct factors preventing its adoption. A multivariate analysis was planned in order to use collected data to infer factors favouring and limiting split-dose regimen adoption.

NCT ID: NCT02287051 Completed - Clinical trials for Colonoscopy: Bowel Preparation

Bowel Prep Acceptance in Clinical Practice

Start date: March 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Bowel preparation for colonoscopy is crucial, since the diagnostic accuracy of the procedure depends on an adequate visualization of the mucosa of the colon.There is strong evidence that the quality of bowel preparation is inversely correlated with the interval between the end of the assumption of the purgative and the start of colonoscopy (shorter intervals are associated with higher levels of preparation).Recent studies have shown that split dose prep significantly improves the quality of bowel cleansing. In light of these data, both the American College of Gastroenterology (ACG) and the European Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ESGE) recommend now split dose prep in order to improve the quality of bowel cleansing. Despite these recommendations, the uptake of schemes in divided doses appears clearly underused in actual clinical practice. In particular, in Italy only a few centers routinely adopt the regime split as their first choice for the preparation for colonoscopy.The reasons why the "split dose" is under-utilized in clinical practice are not entirely clear, but probably in part reflecting gastroenterologists' concerns about potential elements that theoretically could make it less acceptable to the patient (get up early in the morning, potential problems during the journey from home to the hospital) The hypothesis of the study is that many patients would still be willing to accept these potential drawbacks if they were adequately informed about the positive impact of the scheme in divided doses on the effectiveness of bowel preparation, which results in higher reliability of the examination, shorter duration of the procedure, and less risk of rescheduling the exam in the near future