Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04472741

Comparison of Newer Colonoscopy Devices With Standard Forward Viewing (SFV) Colonoscopes in Daily Practice

Comparison of Newer Colonoscopy Devices With Standard Forward Viewing (SFV) High Definition Colonoscopes in Daily Practice

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
4,114 (actual)
Sponsor
Gastroenterologie Baden-Wettingen · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Retrospective data analysis of comparsion of 3 types of colonoscopes in daily practice (FUSE Full spectrum colonoscopy with 330° angle of view vs Pentax standard HD-colonoscopes and Pentax plus Endocuff): medical device of the category IIb (CE-marked device used within its intended purpose)

Detailed description

From March 2015 through February 2017 (phase A) patients referred for ambulant colonoscopy in a private Swiss gastroenterologist's practice were alternatingly allocated to one of the two endoscopy theatres. One equipped with a FUSE® endoscopy system from Endochoice (later: Boston Scientific, nA/FUSE®=1044 examinations), the other with an EPKi Processor and Pentax i10 colonoscopes (nA/Pentax=934 examinations). In March 2017 a second doctor joined the practice, but did not contribute to the study. These organizational changes required randomization to be switched from per-patient alternation to per-day alternation in phase B from March 2018 through September 2019. In phase B the FUSE® system was unchanged (nB/FUSE®=1386 examinations), while the Pentax i10 colonoscopes were additionally equipped with Endocuff® (nB/Endocuff®=750 examinations). Patients with contraindica-tion against Endocuff® (known or found diverticular stenosis) were excluded from the study (nB/removed=127). Patients were given their appointments to any free slot throughout the week without stratification. The study and data analysis was consented by the ethical committee EKNZ Ethikkom-mission Nordwest- und Zentralschweiz (Project-ID 2019-01643). All procedures were performed by one experienced endoscopist (board certified 2004) under nurse assisted propofol sedation (NAPS). Baseline characteristics, age, sex, BMI, smoking habits, diabetes as well as quality of bowel prepara-tion (measured by BBPS score) and indication for colonoscopy (screening, surveillance, diagnostic, such as diarrhea, bleeding, persistent abdominal pain) were assessed. Amount of sedatives, other medications given during endoscopy (e.g. Buscopan®) and time for the endoscopy e.g. time to ile-um, retraction time (pullback time minus intervention time) and time for intervention were measured by the assistant with a stopwatch. These parameters, polyp counts, size and their localisation (entered in a table and to an anatomical scheme), and satisfaction for all parts of the examination (bowel prep and overall satisfaction) were realtime entered to the database by a tablet computer. The data entry was done coded. Only the main investigator could subdue each single patient. Statistics were done with a professional statistics, the co-author Dr. Leiner

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEdifference between colonoscopespatients have been randomly assigned for colonoscopy with FUSE or HD SFV endoscopes with or without Endocuff

Timeline

Start date
2015-03-01
Primary completion
2019-09-25
Completion
2019-09-25
First posted
2020-07-15
Last updated
2021-02-10

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04472741. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.