Tolerability, Efficacy and Mucosal Inflammation Associated With Orally Administered Colon Cleansing for Colonoscopy
NCT ID: NCT00750763
Last Updated: 2009-08-25
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE4
676 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2008-01-31
2008-12-31
Brief Summary
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Some colon cleansing preparations have been shown to cause visible changes in the lining of the bowel which may cause confusion and incorrect diagnoses to be made.
This audit aims to assess the ability of different colon cleansing preparations to clear the colon of faeces. The tolerability of each will also be assessed, as will any changes in the lining of the bowel to assess if one type of colon preparation is more likely to cause visible changes than another.
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Detailed Description
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Colon cleansing preparations can be broadly classified into three groups. Osmotic laxatives such as sodium phosphate (NaP) increase colon water content by attracting extracellular fluid efflux through the bowel wall. Polyethylene glycol (PEG) laxatives are high molecular weight non-absorbable polymers that are administered in a dilute electrolyte solution, this is retained in the colon where it acts as a bowel cleanser without any significant fluid exchange across the colonic mucosa. The third group are stimulant laxatives such as senna or sodium picosulphate which work primarily by enhancing smooth muscle contractility and also they may increase bowel water content.
Previous published audits and studies comparing different types of colon cleansing preparations have been limited by small sample size with only 5 published papers having over 100 patients in each arm of the study. These 5 studies suggest that NaP may be better than PEG but the recent meta-analysis failed to show this, primarily due to the large number of smaller studies showing PEG was better than NaP. Interpretation of the studies is limited by inconsistent and poorly defined measures of efficacy outcome. Most studies have used a subjective endoscopists assessment of the overall quality of the bowel preparation making comparisons between studies impossible. Recently a calibrated externally validated outcome assessment tool has been developed to objectively quantify the quality of bowel preparation4, but no randomised published study has yet utilised this tool.
In the absence of clear difference in efficacy between preparations then patient tolerability is likely to be an important distinguishing feature when selecting a treatment. Data on tolerability outcomes is limited but there is some evidence that PEG solutions are less well tolerated due to the volume of liquid required to drink. This is an area where further study is needed.
The ability of a colonic cleansing preparation to clean the colon effectively also must be balanced by its ability to not induce changes in the lining of the bowel itself. Ulceration and inflammation of the colon has been shown to occur in 3-24% of patients using NaP compared with 1-2% in those receiving PEG. Such findings can be mistaken for inflammatory bowel disease such as Crohns or put down to drug induced changes such as non steroidal anti inflammatory agents (NSAIDs). However, these studies have been either non randomised5 or underpowered to detect real differences.
The most satisfactory colonic cleansing agent in terms of efficacy, tolerability and safety therefore remains unclear.
The aims of the project are:
1. To assess which bowel preparation provides the best colon cleansing using a validated score.
2. To assess the incidence of mucosal inflammation/ulceration induced by each colon cleansing agent.
3. To see which colon cleansing agent is best tolerated by patients.
The information gained from this audit will enable the type of colonic cleansing preparation to be tailored to the subjects indication for requiring colonoscopy. For example in those with possible inflammatory bowel disease the colon cleansing agent which produces the least mucosal inflammation would be required to reduce the incidence of a false positive diagnosis whilst the colon cleansing agent which is most tolerable may be more important in the elderly.
This study will be a prospective blinded audit comparing three colon cleansing agents, which are used routinely in clinical practice for colonoscopy. The three will be Sodium Phosphate (Fleet), Sodium Picosulphate (Picolax/Picoprep) and PEG (Colonlytlye).
All patients who are referred to undergo colonoscopy would be entered into the study except for:
1. Prior history of inflammatory bowel disease or suspected inflammatory bowel disease, or patients on current non steroidal antiinflammatory medication (excluding low dose aspirin). These patients may have mucosal inflammation/ulceration which would prevent analysis of mucosal abnormalities due to the colon cleansing agent and so would not be studied.
2. Patients with heart failure (NYHA \>2) or renal failure (GFR\<30) (since fluid shifts associated with sodium phosphate bowel preparation have been reported).
3. All patients over the age of 75 due to potential dehydration and hyperphosphatemia from the bowel preparations.
Each patient would be randomised to receive one of the three colon cleansing agents (Sodium Phosphate, Sodium Picosulphate or PEG) that are routinely used in clinical practice. The endoscopy administration staff at each site would be responsible for random allocation of the bowel preparation using random number generation with the resultant bowel preparation being collected by the patient from a pharmacy, as per usual practice, prior to the colonoscopy. There are no exclusion criteria for bowel preparation selection.
On the day of colonoscopy but prior to the procedure an assessment of the tolerability of the colon cleansing agent would be made using a questionnaire.
During colonoscopy an assessment of the efficacy of the colon cleansing agent is made by the blinded colonoscopist using the previously validated Ottawa bowel preparation assessment tool.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
DIAGNOSTIC
SINGLE
Study Groups
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1
PEG (Colonlytely) - 4 litres
Colonlytely
Bowel preparation
2
Picosulphate (Picolax/Picoprep) - 2 sachets
Picolax/Picoprep
Bowel preparation
3
Sodium Phosphate (Fleet) - 2 bottles
Fleet
Bowel preparation
Interventions
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Colonlytely
Bowel preparation
Picolax/Picoprep
Bowel preparation
Fleet
Bowel preparation
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
* Patients with heart failure (NYHA \>2) or renal failure (GFR\<30) (since fluid shifts associated with sodium phosphate bowel preparation have been reported).
* All patients over the age of 75 due to potential dehydration and hyperphosphatemia from the bowel preparations.
18 Years
75 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Fremantle Hospital and Health Service
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Department of Gastroenterology, Fremantle Hospital
Principal Investigators
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Ian C Lawrance, MD PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Department of Gastroenterology, Fremantle Hospital
Locations
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Department of Gastroenterology, Fremantle Hospital
Fremantle, Western Australia, Australia
Countries
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References
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Lawrance IC, Willert RP, Murray K. A validated bowel-preparation tolerability questionnaire and assessment of three commonly used bowel-cleansing agents. Dig Dis Sci. 2013 Apr;58(4):926-35. doi: 10.1007/s10620-012-2449-0. Epub 2012 Oct 25.
Lawrance IC, Willert RP, Murray K. Bowel cleansing for colonoscopy: prospective randomized assessment of efficacy and of induced mucosal abnormality with three preparation agents. Endoscopy. 2011 May;43(5):412-8. doi: 10.1055/s-0030-1256193. Epub 2011 May 4.
Other Identifiers
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FHHS
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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