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Effectiveness of Prokinetic Agents in Improving Abdominal Discomfort at Colonoscopy

A Randomized Controlled Double-blinded of Effectiveness of Prokinetic Agents in Improving Abdominal Discomfort at Pre- and Post- Colonoscopy

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04104867
Enrollment
525
Registered
2019-09-26
Start date
2019-09-16
Completion date
2023-02-01
Last updated
2021-09-02

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

Conditions

Abdominal Pain

Brief summary

colonoscopy has been a preferred modality for colorectal screening which efficiently reduce in morbidity and mortality of the disaese. Although colonoscopy is a safe procedure, some patients may be suffered from major and minor complications. Abdominal discomfort (approximately 30%) usually persisted for 2 days after colonoscopy. These unsatisfactory experiences might affect the patients' willingness to return for a repeat colonoscopy, which the loss of adherence eventually reduce the effectiveness of colorectal cancer screening and surveillance. Furthermore, during colonoscopy preparation, the patients are required to take large volume Polyethylene glycol-electrolyte lavage (PEG-EL) solution for bowel preparation which possibly lead to unpleasant gastrointestinal symptoms likewise. Prokinetic agents are a class of drugs that promoted gastrointestinal motility and, thereby, decrease transit time. This stimulatory effect was considered clinically relevant to the management of disorders characterized by impaired motility, such as gastro-esophageal reflux, gastroparesis, intestinal pseudo-obstruction, and colonic inertia. Prokinetic agents have various mechanism such as Cholinergic agonists, Dopamine antagonists (i.e.Domperidone, Metoclopramide), Serotonergic agonists (i.e. Cisapride, Prucalopride,Mosapride). Interestingly, these drugs have been used to minimize the unpleasant abdominal symptoms from colonoscopy. The objective of this study is to examine the efficacy of a prokinetic agent in alleviating abdominal discomfort during the period of colonoscopy preparation and aftercolonoscopy consecutively.

Detailed description

The participants will be randomly selected into one of the three arms of this report's diagram (1:1:1 ratio) drawing of a sealed, opaque envelope by one of the surgical residents in charge or by the attending surgeon. The participants in each group will receive an envelope containing pills of identical appearance, each of Domperidone 10 mg, Itopride 50 mg or placebo. Both the attending physicians and the participants are blinded to the kind of study medication contained in the envelope. From the regular protocol for colonoscopy preparation, no solid foods are allowed except low residue diet during three days before the procedure. On the next day, only liquid diet consumption is allowed. On the day prior to colonoscopy, the patients can have only clear liquid and ad libitum throughout the day until midnight. Additionally, the patients are instructed to take one pill at 8.00 AM, 12.00 AM, 4.30 PM respectively. They are also informed to begin consuming the 3 liters of PEG-EL at 5.00 PM and complete it within 3 hours. Lastly, they are instructed to take the fourth pill at 6.00 AM on the day of colonoscopy. At the colonoscopy unit, the patients will be interviewed regarding the severity of abdominal discomfort during the preparation period after consuming the 3 liters of PEG-EL using a 4-point scale (1=absent, 2=mild, 3=moderate, 4=severe). After finish the procedure, patients are informed to continue the study medication for three days consecutively. The interviewer will make a phone call to the individuals at the first and third day after the procedure to confirm compliance of the study medication and inquiry about the severity of abdominal discomfort after procedure by using the same 4-point scale. If the patient can't be reached by a phone call or fail to continue the medication, this patient is classified as a drop out. All data is collected by the main investigator from the patient chart and data recording form. Statistical analysis is performed using SPSS version 18. Patient characteristic and numerical data are reported by descriptive statistic such as mean, standard deviation. Parametric data is compared between groups using Chi-square, logistic regression analysis.Statistical significance is set at a level of p\<0.05.

Interventions

the patients are instructed to take one pill of Itopride at 8.00 AM, 12.00 AM, 4.30 PM respectively before the dat of colonoscopy. Lastly, they are instructed to take the fourth pill at 6.00 AM on the day of colonoscopy.

DRUGDomperidone

the patients are instructed to take one pill of Domperidone at 8.00 AM, 12.00 AM, 4.30 PM respectively before the dat of colonoscopy. Lastly, they are instructed to take the fourth pill at 6.00 AM on the day of colonoscopy.

OTHERPlacebo

the patients are instructed to take one pill of placebo at 8.00 AM, 12.00 AM, 4.30 PM respectively before the dat of colonoscopy. Lastly, they are instructed to take the fourth pill at 6.00 AM on the day of colonoscopy.

Sponsors

Mahidol University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
OTHER
Masking
SINGLE (Subject)

Intervention model description

The participants will be randomly selected into one of the three arms (1:1:1 ratio) of a sealed, opaque envelope by one of the surgical residents or by the attending surgeon. The participants in each group will receive an envelope containing pills of identical appearance, each of Domperidone 10 mg, Itopride 50 mg or placebo. Both the attending physicians and the participants are blinded to the kind of study medication contained in the envelope. They are also informed to begin consuming the 3 liters of PEG-EL at 5.00 PM and complete it within 3 hours. Lastly, they are instructed to take the fourth pill at 6.00 AM on the day of colonoscopy. At the colonoscopy unit, the patients will be interviewed regarding the severity of abdominal discomfort during the preparation period after consuming the 3 liters of PEG-EL using a numeric pain rating scale.

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Patients who are an outpatient scheduled for elective colonoscopy at Ramathibodi hospital * Age between 18 to 80 years old * American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) classification 1-2

Exclusion criteria

* Patients who reject to participate or withdrawal from the research * History of Domperidone or Itopride allergy * Patients who do not complete taking the study medication * Patients who have ostomy or history of subtotal colectomy * Patients who are diagnosed active colitis i.e. ulcerative colitis, TB colitis * Take any pain reliever agent during the study period * Patients who are unable to communicate comprehensibly * Severe renal or hepatic impairment * Pregnancy

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
abdominal pain24 hourthe severity of abdominal pain using a 4-point scale (1=absent, 2=mild, 3=moderate, 4=severe)

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
abdominal pain48 hourthe severity of abdominal pain using a 4-point scale (1=absent, 2=mild, 3=moderate, 4=severe)

Countries

Thailand

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026