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Adequate bowel preparation is critical for successful colonoscopy, yet inadequate preparation remains a significant clinical challenge, occurring in 20-30% of procedures. In hospitalized patients undergoing therapeutic colonoscopy, suboptimal preparation leads to increased costs, prolonged hospital stay, and potential procedure cancellation or rescheduling. Current standard care involves resident ward rounds twice daily.
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.
Full description
Background and Rationale Adequate bowel preparation is essential for high-quality colonoscopy. The Boston Bowel Preparation Scale (BBPS) is a validated tool for assessing preparation quality, with scores ≥6 (and each segment ≥2) considered adequate. Studies report inadequate preparation rates of 20-30% in routine practice, leading to missed lesions, prolonged procedures, and increased costs.
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:
Design Features:
Timeline Structure:
Interventions
Control Group (Standard Care):
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:
Standardized Elements (Both Groups): To isolate the effect of ward round frequency, all other aspects remain identical:
Primary Outcome:
Key Secondary Outcomes:
Subgroup Analyses (Pre-specified):
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:
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300 participants in 2 patient groups
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Qiangqiang Tian
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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