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Colon Cleansing Quality of Polyethylene Glycol Compared With Polyethylene Glycol Plus Ascorbic Acid.

Randomized Clinical Trial to Evaluate the Colon Cleansing Quality of Polyethylene Glycol Compared With Polyethylene Glycol Plus Ascorbic Acid in Patients With Past Poor Colonic Preparation

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02073552
Acronym
REPREP1
Enrollment
472
Registered
2014-02-27
Start date
2014-05-31
Completion date
2016-05-31
Last updated
2016-06-27

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Colonoscopy Preparation

Keywords

colon cleansing, bowel preparations; polyethyleneglycol

Brief summary

The purpose of the study is to assess whether a low volume polyethylene glycol (PEG) plus ascorbic acid based bowel preparation for colonoscopy is not inferior to a large volume polyethylene glycol preparation in subjects with past history of poor bowel preparation

Detailed description

Two key quality indicators for colonoscopy are the cecal intubation rate and the percentage of neoplastic lesions detected. Both factors are associated with adequate bowel cleansing. Poor cleansing ranged from 5% to 30% across studies, negatively affecting the efficiency of colonoscopy. The most important factor associated with poor colonic preparation is the past history of poor bowel preparation. However, there are no recommendations on the proper type of preparation in those patients. In two non-randomized studies inadequate cleansing in the second colonoscopy ranged from 9.8% to 23%. Randomized studies comparing high volume (3-4 liters) with low volume (2 liters) PEG preparations, which are better tolerated by patients, are therefore needed before making any recommendations in this regard.

Interventions

\- Polyethylene glycol 4000: 16 envelopes (70 g of powder each). It includes electrolytes and sodium sulfate. These substances make PEG metabolically inert, achieving a suitable osmotic balance, despite having a high molecular weight. The preparation passes along the gastrointestinal tract without causing net absorption of fluid or electrolytes. It is routinely used in clinical practice for bowel cleansing, before abdominal surgery, barium enema and other colorectal and genitourinary tract tests. Participants will divide the whole doses in 4 liters of water taking half the day before the examination starting at 20.00 h and the other half at 6.00 pm on the day of the examination.

DRUGMacrogol 3350 plus ascorbic acid

\- Macrogol 3350 plus ascorbic acid: 4 envelopes, 2 containing 112 g polyethylene glycol and electrolytes and 2 with 2 g of ascorbic acid. The properties of the polyethylene glycol are the same as those mentioned previously, while ascorbic acid generates an osmotic gradient potentiating the effect of polyethylene glycol. It is used routinely as a bowel prep. Participants will divide the doses in 2 liters of water taking half the day before (112 g of PEG and an 11 g of ascorbic acid) the examination at 20.00 h and the other half at 6.00 pm on the day of the examination

Sponsors

Fundación Canaria Rafael Clavijo para la Investigación Biomédica
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
SINGLE (Investigator)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Age\> 18 years * Outpatients with a history of past poor bowel prep, defined according to the Boston scale as a score less than 5. * Signed informed consent

Exclusion criteria

paralytic ileus, intestinal obstruction, megacolon, poorly controlled hypertension (systolic pressure\> 180, dyastolic pressure\> 100), congestive heart failure, acute liver failure, end stage renal disease (dialysis or pre-dialysis), New York Heart Association class III-IV, pregnancy, diagnosis of phenylketonuria, diagnosis of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency, dementia. History of poor preparation in the previous colonoscopy, colon resection, less than 75% intake of the bowel preparation in the index colonoscopy, refusal to participate in the study, patients in whom a new colonoscopy is not indicated despite a poor bowel preparation(i.e. ileal Crohn disease with poor large bowel preparation), lack of compliance with the bowel preparation schedule.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Colon cleansing30 daysColon cleansing will be assessed just after colonoscopy by the endoscopist in charge of performing the examination and afterwards images were reviewed by a the staff of endoscopists for validation (30 days). For assessing colon cleansing a validated scale (Boston scale) will be used.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Tolerance of bowel preparationTolerance will be assessed just before colonoscopy by a research assistantIt will be assessed by using a visual analog scale colon
Detection of colorectal neoplasia14 monthsDetection rate of adenoma and colorectal cancer will be assessed for both groups (low volume and high volume preparation)

Countries

Spain

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 27, 2026