Title: Factors associated with lesion detection in colonoscopy among different indications |
Authors: Mangas-Sanjuan, Carolina Seoane, Agustín Alvarez‐Gonzalez, Marco Antonio Luè, Alberto Suárez, Adolfo Álvarez-García, Verónica Bujanda, Luis Portillo, Isabel González, Natalia Cid‐Gomez, Lucía Cubiella, Joaquín Rodríguez Camacho, Elena Ponce, Marta Díez-Redondo, Pilar Herraiz, Maite Pellisé, María Ono, Akiko Baile Maxía, Sandra Medina‐Prado, L. Murcia, O Zapater, Pedro JOVER, RODRIGO |
Editor: Wiley Online Library |
Department: Departamentos de la UMH::Medicina Clínica |
Issue Date: 2022-11 |
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/11000/30937 |
Abstract:
Background and objective: Different factors may influence colonoscopy performance measures. We aimed to analyze procedure- and endoscopist-related factors associated with detection of colorectal lesions and whether these factors have a similar influence in the context of different colonoscopy indications: positive fecal immunochemical test (+FIT) and post-polypectomy surveillance colonoscopies.
Methods: This multicenter cross-sectional study included adults aged 40-80 years. Endoscopists (N = 96) who had performed ≥50 examinations were assessed for physician-related factors. Adenoma detection rate (ADR), adenomas per colonoscopy rate (APCR), advanced ADR, serrated polyp detection (SDR), and serrated polyps per colonoscopy rate (SPPCR) were calculated.
Results: We included 12,932 procedures, with 4810 carried out after a positive FIT and 1967 for surveillance. Of the 96 endoscopists evaluated, 43.8% were women, and the mean age was 41.9 years. The ADR, advanced ADR, and SDR were 39.7%, 17.7%, and 12.8%, respectively. Adenoma detection rate was higher in colonoscopies after a +FIT (50.3%) with a more than doubled advanced ADR compared to non-FIT procedures (27.6% vs. 13.0%) and similar results in serrated lesions (14.7% vs. 13.5%). Among all the detection indicators analyzed, withdrawal time was the only factor independently related to improvement (p < 0.001). Regarding FIT-positive and surveillance procedures, for both indications, withdrawal time was also the only factor associated with a higher detection of adenomas and serrated polyps (p < 0.001). Endoscopist-related factors (i.e., weekly hours dedicated to endoscopy, annual colonoscopy volume and lifetime number of colonoscopies performed) had also impact on lesion detection (APCR, advanced ADR and SPPCR).
Conclusions: Withdrawal time was the factor most commonly associated with improved detection of colonic lesions globally and in endoscopies for + FIT and post-polypectomy surveillance. Physician-related factors may help to address strategies to support training and service provision. Our results can be used for establishing future benchmarking and quality improvement in different colonoscopy indications.
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Keywords/Subjects: adenoma detection colonoscopy colorectal cancer endoscopist serrated polyp |
Type of document: application/pdf |
Access rights: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional |
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/ueg2.12325 |
Appears in Collections: Artículos Medicina Clínica
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