Enhanced Ward Rounds for Bowel Preparation Quality in Hospitalized Patients Undergoing Colonoscopy
NCT ID: NCT07263867
Last Updated: 2025-12-04
Study Results
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Basic Information
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NOT_YET_RECRUITING
NA
300 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2025-12-20
2026-12-30
Brief Summary
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This cluster-randomized crossover trial aims to evaluate whether increasing the frequency of structured resident ward rounds from 2 to 4 times per day can improve bowel preparation quality in hospitalized patients scheduled for therapeutic colonoscopy. The enhanced ward round intervention includes standardized checklist review, medication verification, dietary compliance confirmation, adverse event screening, and timely intervention when needed.
Three hospital wards will be randomly assigned to different sequences of intervention and control periods using a crossover design with washout periods. The primary outcome is adequate bowel preparation quality assessed by Boston Bowel Preparation Scale (BBPS ≥6 with each segment ≥2), evaluated by blinded endoscopists. Secondary outcomes include procedure quality metrics (cecal intubation rate, examination duration), safety endpoints (electrolyte disturbances, aspiration events), health economics measures (length of stay, total costs), and healthcare worker burden (nursing workload, night-time call frequency).
Subgroup analyses will examine intervention effects across age groups, cognitive function levels, prior colonoscopy experience, and comorbidity burden to identify populations most likely to benefit from enhanced monitoring.
This pragmatic trial addresses a clinically relevant question using a real-world implementation strategy designed to minimize workflow disruption. Results will inform evidence-based policies regarding optimal ward round frequency for colonoscopy preparation in hospital settings.
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Detailed Description
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Hospitalized patients face unique challenges for bowel preparation including comorbidities, cognitive impairment, medication complexity, and communication barriers. While outpatient preparation often relies on written instructions and telephone reminders, inpatients theoretically benefit from direct medical supervision. However, the optimal frequency and structure of ward rounds during bowel preparation remain undefined.
Current practice at our institution includes twice-daily resident ward rounds (morning and afternoon). We hypothesize that increasing ward round frequency to four times daily (adding midday and evening rounds) with a standardized intervention package will improve preparation quality by:
1. Enhanced medication compliance monitoring
2. Real-time dietary adherence verification
3. Early detection and management of adverse events
4. Improved patient education and anxiety reduction
5. Timely adjustment of preparation regimens Study Design This is a single-center, cluster-randomized, crossover trial with three hospital wards serving as clusters. Each ward will alternate between intervention and control periods in a balanced sequence with washout periods to minimize carryover effects.
Design Features:
* Cluster Unit: Hospital ward (to avoid contamination within same care team)
* Crossover Design: Each ward serves as its own control across time periods
* Washout Periods: 1-week washout between intervention periods
* Blinded Outcome Assessment: Endoscopists remain blinded to patient allocation
Timeline Structure:
* Phase 0 (Weeks 0-1): Protocol training and system testing
* Phase 1 (Weeks 2-5): First intervention period (4 weeks)
* Washout 1 (Week 6): Transition period
* Phase 2 (Weeks 7-10): Second intervention period (4 weeks)
* Washout 2 (Week 11): Transition period
* Phase 3 (Weeks 12-15): Third intervention period (4 weeks)
* Weeks 16-17: Data cleaning and database lock Randomization: An independent biostatistician will generate a randomization sequence using Williams design for 3×3 crossover. Ward assignments will be concealed in sealed envelopes and revealed to ward supervisors only at the start of each period.
Interventions
Control Group (Standard Care):
* Ward rounds: 2 times/day (morning 7:30-9:00, afternoon 15:00-17:00)
* Standard clinical assessment during rounds
* Verbal confirmation of preparation instructions
Intervention Group (Enhanced Ward Rounds):
* Ward rounds: 4 times/day (morning 7:30-9:00, midday 12:00-13:00, afternoon 15:00-17:00, evening 21:00-22:00)
* Duration: ≥10 minutes per patient per round
* Standardized intervention package at each round:
1. Medication Verification: Confirm PEG dose, timing, completion rate; assess tolerance (nausea, bloating)
2. Dietary Compliance Check: Review food/fluid intake in past 4 hours; correct any deviations (e.g., family-provided meals, solid foods)
3. Adverse Event Screening: Assess for electrolyte imbalance symptoms (weakness, palpitations, muscle cramps), aspiration risk (vomiting with cough), dehydration signs
4. Clinical Decision Support: Prescribe antiemetics for severe nausea; adjust PEG rate for bloating; order electrolyte testing if indicated
5. Patient Education Assessment: (First and pre-procedure evening rounds only) Three-question quiz on preparation instructions; re-educate if \<2/3 correct Adherence Monitoring: Electronic time-stamped check-in via mobile app at each ward round, with mandatory completion of standardized checklist (cannot submit if \<10 minutes elapsed).
Standardized Elements (Both Groups): To isolate the effect of ward round frequency, all other aspects remain identical:
* Preparation Regimen: Split-dose PEG (2L at D-1 18:00, 1L at D-day 6:00)
* Diet Protocol: Low-residue diet at D-2, clear liquids only at D-1
* Patient Education: Written handbook + 8-minute video within 24h of admission
* Rescue Protocol: Additional 500ml PEG or enema on examination morning if residual stool reported Outcome Measures
Primary Outcome:
* Adequate bowel preparation rate: Proportion of patients achieving BBPS total score ≥6 AND each segment score ≥2
* Assessment: During colonoscopy by blinded endoscopist
* Timeframe: At time of colonoscopy procedure
Key Secondary Outcomes:
1. BBPS total score (continuous, 0-9 scale)
2. Cecal intubation rate and time (minutes)
3. Total examination duration (minutes)
4. Adenoma detection rate (ADR)
5. Preparation-related adverse events (electrolyte abnormalities, aspiration, vomiting requiring medication)
6. Procedure rescheduling/repeat preparation rate
7. Length of hospital stay (days)
8. Total hospitalization costs (RMB)
9. Patient satisfaction score (5-point Likert scale)
10. Night-time nurse call frequency (21:00-7:00, normalized per patient)
11. Nursing workload assessment score
Subgroup Analyses (Pre-specified):
* Age: \<60 / 60-74 / ≥75 years
* Cognitive function: Normal / mild impairment / moderate-severe impairment
* Prior colonoscopy: Yes / No
* Charlson Comorbidity Index: 0-2 / 3-4 / ≥5 Statistical Analysis Plan The primary analysis will use a generalized linear mixed model (GLMM) with logit link for the binary primary outcome, including fixed effects for treatment, period, and sequence, and random effects for ward. An intention-to-treat approach will be employed. Sample size of 268 evaluable patients (134 per group) provides 80% power to detect an absolute increase from 75% to 90% in adequate preparation rate, assuming ICC=0.03 and two-sided α=0.05.
Sensitivity analyses will include per-protocol population (excluding participants with \<75% adherence to assigned ward round frequency), complete case analysis, and varying ICC assumptions. Subgroup effects will be assessed through treatment-by-subgroup interaction terms.
Safety Monitoring
The independent DSMB will conduct one interim analysis at 50% enrollment. Pre-specified stopping rules include:
* Significant increase in serious adverse events (SAEs) in intervention group (RR\>2.0, p\<0.01)
* Overwhelming efficacy (preparation rate difference \>20%, p\<0.001) All SAEs will be reported to the IRB within 24 hours. Quality Control
* BBPS rater training: All endoscopists complete standardized training with 20 reference videos; inter-rater reliability (Kappa) \>0.75 required
* Calibration meetings every 4 weeks to review borderline cases
* Electronic data capture (REDCap) with real-time validation rules
* Weekly data monitoring by research coordinator with 10% source verification
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
CROSSOVER
TREATMENT
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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Enhanced Ward Rounds (Intervention)
Residents conduct ward rounds 4 times daily (morning, midday, afternoon, evening) with each visit lasting ≥10 minutes. Standardized intervention package includes: (1) medication verification and adherence check, (2) dietary compliance review, (3) adverse event screening for electrolyte disturbances and aspiration risk, (4) clinical decision support with timely interventions, and (5) patient education assessment. Electronic check-in required at each visit with time-stamped checklist completion.
Enhanced Frequency Ward Rounds with Standardized Intervention Package
Increase resident physician ward round frequency from 2 to 4 times per day (adding midday 12:00-13:00 and evening 21:00-22:00 rounds). Each ward round includes standardized checklist-based assessment covering medication adherence, dietary compliance, adverse events, and patient understanding. Duration ≥10 minutes per patient. Electronic documentation with time stamps ensures adherence monitoring.
Standard Ward Rounds
Standard care with residents conducting ward rounds 2 times daily (morning and afternoon). Patients receive routine clinical assessment and verbal confirmation of bowel preparation instructions. All other aspects of care remain identical to intervention group including PEG preparation regimen, dietary protocol, patient education materials, and rescue protocols.
Standard Frequency Ward Rounds
Standard care with resident physician ward rounds twice daily at morning (7:30-9:00) and afternoon (15:00-17:00). Routine clinical assessment and verbal confirmation of preparation protocol. Represents current practice standard.
Interventions
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Enhanced Frequency Ward Rounds with Standardized Intervention Package
Increase resident physician ward round frequency from 2 to 4 times per day (adding midday 12:00-13:00 and evening 21:00-22:00 rounds). Each ward round includes standardized checklist-based assessment covering medication adherence, dietary compliance, adverse events, and patient understanding. Duration ≥10 minutes per patient. Electronic documentation with time stamps ensures adherence monitoring.
Standard Frequency Ward Rounds
Standard care with resident physician ward rounds twice daily at morning (7:30-9:00) and afternoon (15:00-17:00). Routine clinical assessment and verbal confirmation of preparation protocol. Represents current practice standard.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Hospitalized patients (inpatients)
3. Scheduled for therapeutic colonoscopy (polypectomy, endoscopic mucosal resection \[EMR\], endoscopic submucosal dissection \[ESD\], or biopsy for diagnosis)
4. Time from admission to scheduled colonoscopy ≥48 hours (allowing adequate preparation time)
5. Patient or legal representative able to provide written informed consent
6. Able to understand and follow bowel preparation instructions (with assistance from caregivers if needed)
Exclusion Criteria
2. Emergency or same-day colonoscopy (scheduled \<24 hours after admission)
3. History of total colectomy or current colostomy/ileostomy
4. Severe cognitive impairment (Mini-Cog score 0-1 or MMSE \<18) without available caregiver
5. Severe cardiopulmonary disease: New York Heart Association (NYHA) Class IV heart failure, chronic kidney disease (CKD) stage 4-5 (eGFR \<30 ml/min/1.73m²) unable to tolerate PEG-based preparation
6. Known or suspected pregnancy, currently breastfeeding
7. Previous severe allergic reaction to PEG or bowel preparation agents
8. Current participation in another interventional clinical trial
9. Unable to provide informed consent and no legal representative available
10. Patient or legal representative declines participation
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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LanZhou University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Zhaofeng Chen
Pro
Locations
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The First Hospital of Lanzhou University
Lanzhou, Gansu, China
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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References
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Froehlich F, Wietlisbach V, Gonvers JJ, Burnand B, Vader JP. Impact of colonic cleansing on quality and diagnostic yield of colonoscopy: the European Panel of Appropriateness of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy European multicenter study. Gastrointest Endosc. 2005 Mar;61(3):378-84. doi: 10.1016/s0016-5107(04)02776-2.
Clark BT, Rustagi T, Laine L. What level of bowel prep quality requires early repeat colonoscopy: systematic review and meta-analysis of the impact of preparation quality on adenoma detection rate. Am J Gastroenterol. 2014 Nov;109(11):1714-23; quiz 1724. doi: 10.1038/ajg.2014.232. Epub 2014 Aug 19.
Johnson DA, Barkun AN, Cohen LB, Dominitz JA, Kaltenbach T, Martel M, Robertson DJ, Boland CR, Giardello FM, Lieberman DA, Levin TR, Rex DK; US Multi-Society Task Force on Colorectal Cancer. Optimizing adequacy of bowel cleansing for colonoscopy: recommendations from the US multi-society task force on colorectal cancer. Gastroenterology. 2014 Oct;147(4):903-24. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2014.07.002. No abstract available.
Hassan C, East J, Radaelli F, Spada C, Benamouzig R, Bisschops R, Bretthauer M, Dekker E, Dinis-Ribeiro M, Ferlitsch M, Fuccio L, Awadie H, Gralnek I, Jover R, Kaminski MF, Pellise M, Triantafyllou K, Vanella G, Mangas-Sanjuan C, Frazzoni L, Van Hooft JE, Dumonceau JM. Bowel preparation for colonoscopy: European Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ESGE) Guideline - Update 2019. Endoscopy. 2019 Aug;51(8):775-794. doi: 10.1055/a-0959-0505. Epub 2019 Jul 11.
Lai EJ, Calderwood AH, Doros G, Fix OK, Jacobson BC. The Boston bowel preparation scale: a valid and reliable instrument for colonoscopy-oriented research. Gastrointest Endosc. 2009 Mar;69(3 Pt 2):620-5. doi: 10.1016/j.gie.2008.05.057. Epub 2009 Jan 10.
Other Identifiers
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LDYYczf2025112301
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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