Effect of Adding Simethicone to Split-dose Polyethylene Glycol for Bowel Preparation in a Screening Colonoscopy Setting
Last updated on July 2021Recruitment
- Recruitment Status
- Recruiting
- Estimated Enrollment
- Same as current
Summary
- Conditions
- Colo-rectal Cancer
- Colonic Neoplasms
- Type
- Interventional
- Phase
- Not Applicable
- Design
- Allocation: RandomizedIntervention Model: Parallel AssignmentMasking: Single (Care Provider)Primary Purpose: Diagnostic
Participation Requirements
- Age
- Between 50 years and 74 years
- Gender
- Both males and females
Description
a. Study type: Endoscopist-blinded randomized controlled trial i. Prospective inclusion of patients scheduled for a colonoscopy by nationwide CRC screening program after a positive faecal immunochemical test. ii. Randomization by computer generated tables. iii. Allocation concealment by sealed, opaq...
a. Study type: Endoscopist-blinded randomized controlled trial i. Prospective inclusion of patients scheduled for a colonoscopy by nationwide CRC screening program after a positive faecal immunochemical test. ii. Randomization by computer generated tables. iii. Allocation concealment by sealed, opaque envelopes. iv. Endoscopist-blinded: endoscopist blinded to the group allocation. v. Patient informed about its bowel cleansing regimen. b. Selection participant method: i. Inclusion by invitation of patients aged between 50 and 74 years, inclusive, scheduled for colonoscopy by nationwide CRC screening program after a positive faecal immunochemical test. ii. Exclusion criteria for nationwide CRC screening program: previous diagnosis of CRC, presence of known genetic susceptibility syndromes related with CRC, personal history of inflammatory bowel disease, presence of gastrointestinal complaints (significant changes in gastrointestinal transit in the last 6 months or evidence of gastrointestinal bleeding), a normal colonoscopy in the last 10 years and a normal flexible sigmoidoscopy in the last 5 years. Exclusion criteria of this study also include: known or suspected gastrointestinal obstruction or perforation, toxic megacolon, major colonic resection, pregnant or at risk of becoming pregnant and lactating women, known or suspected hypersensitivity to the active or other ingredients. c. Sample size: i. 412 (2 groups of 206 patients). ii. To improve adequate bowel preparation rate (primary outcome) from 85% (value from the investigator's own database) to 95% (target standard suggested by ESGE) and assuming a normal distribution and a power of 90% (?=0.05), the calculated sample size of each of the 2 groups was 188; allowing for a 10% dropout rate, the sample size is 206 per group (412 patients overall). Adequate bowel preparation is defined as total. Boston Bowel Preparation Scale ?6 and ?2 in each segment. The chosen scale is the most systematically validated and appropriate for the clinical setting. d. Procedures and data collection methods: Form sheets filled by the endoscopist about intraprocedural measures and by the nurse about patient compliance and tolerability to the prescribed cleansing regimen. e. Analysed variables: i. Primary outcome: adequate bowel preparation rate. ii. Secondary outcomes: ADR, CIR, compliance and tolerability related to the bowel cleansing regimen. iii. Patient characteristics and other variables: age, gender, degree of mucosal bubble reported by a comprehensive scoring used by previous studies (grade 0: no bubbles; 1: minimal or occasional bubbles (must be actively sought); 2: moderate or obviously present; 3: severe or so many bubbles that vision is obscured), withdrawal time, polyp detection rate and complications rate. f. Statistical analysis: i. Performed using statistical software IBM SPSS Statistics, Version 25.0. Armonk, NY: IBM Corp. ii. Continuous variables are reported as mean and standard deviation or median and interquartile range, if they have normal or not normal distribution, respectively; categorical variables as absolute and relative frequency. iii. Continuous variables are compared between two groups using Student's T test if they have a normal distribution and homogeneity of variance or Mann-Whitney U if these conditions are not met. Categorical variables are compared using Pearson's X2 test or Fisher test. iv. All hypotheses are two-tailed and a P-value<0.05 is considered statistically significant.
Tracking Information
- NCT #
- NCT03816774
- Collaborators
- Not Provided
- Investigators
- Study Director: Miguel Areia, PhD Portuguese Oncology Institute, Coimbra