background: The ideal preparation regimen for pediatric colonoscopy remains elusive, and available preparations continue to represent a challenge for children. The aim of this study was to compare the efficacy, safety, tolerability, and acceptance of 4 methods of bowel cleansing before colonoscopy in children.METHODS: This randomized, investigator-blinded, noninferiority trial enrolled all children aged 2 to 18 years undergoing elective colonoscopy in a referral center for pediatric gastroenterology. Patients were randomly assigned to receive polyethylene glycol (PEG) 4000 with simethicon (PEG-ELS group) or PEG-4000 with citrates and simethicone plus bisacodyl (PEG-CS+Bisacodyl group), or PEG 3350 with ascorbic acid (PEG-Asc group), or sodium picosulfate plus magnesium oxide and citric acid (NaPico+MgCit group). Bowel cleansing was evaluated according to the Boston Bowel Preparation Scale. The primary end point was overall colon cleansing. Tolerability, acceptability, and compliance were also evaluated.RESULTS: Two hundred ninety-nine patients were randomly allocated to the 4 groups. In the per-protocol analysis, PEG-CS+Bisacodyl, PEG-Asc, and NaPico+MgCit were noninferior to PEG-ELS in bowel-cleansing efficacy of both the whole colon (P = .910) and colonic segments. No serious adverse events occurred in any group. Rates of tolerability, acceptability, and compliance were significantly higher in the NaPico+MgCit group.CONCLUSIONS: Low-volume PEG preparations (PEG-CS+Bisacodyl, PEG-Asc) and NaPico+MgCit are noninferior to PEG-ELS in children, representing an attractive alternative to high-volume regimens in clinical practice. Because of the higher tolerability and acceptability profile, NaPico+MgCit would appear as the most suitable regimen for bowel preparation in children

Bowel Preparations for Colonoscopy: An RCT / Giovanni Di Nardo; Marina Aloi; Salvatore Cucchiara; Cristiano Spada; Cesare Hassan; Fortunata Civitelli; Federica Nuti; Chiara Ziparo; Andrea Pession; Mario Lima; Giuseppe La Torre; Salvatore Oliva. - In: PEDIATRICS. - ISSN 0031-4005. - STAMPA. - 134:2(2014), pp. 1-8. [10.1542/peds.2014-0131]

Bowel Preparations for Colonoscopy: An RCT

LIMA, MARIO;
2014

Abstract

background: The ideal preparation regimen for pediatric colonoscopy remains elusive, and available preparations continue to represent a challenge for children. The aim of this study was to compare the efficacy, safety, tolerability, and acceptance of 4 methods of bowel cleansing before colonoscopy in children.METHODS: This randomized, investigator-blinded, noninferiority trial enrolled all children aged 2 to 18 years undergoing elective colonoscopy in a referral center for pediatric gastroenterology. Patients were randomly assigned to receive polyethylene glycol (PEG) 4000 with simethicon (PEG-ELS group) or PEG-4000 with citrates and simethicone plus bisacodyl (PEG-CS+Bisacodyl group), or PEG 3350 with ascorbic acid (PEG-Asc group), or sodium picosulfate plus magnesium oxide and citric acid (NaPico+MgCit group). Bowel cleansing was evaluated according to the Boston Bowel Preparation Scale. The primary end point was overall colon cleansing. Tolerability, acceptability, and compliance were also evaluated.RESULTS: Two hundred ninety-nine patients were randomly allocated to the 4 groups. In the per-protocol analysis, PEG-CS+Bisacodyl, PEG-Asc, and NaPico+MgCit were noninferior to PEG-ELS in bowel-cleansing efficacy of both the whole colon (P = .910) and colonic segments. No serious adverse events occurred in any group. Rates of tolerability, acceptability, and compliance were significantly higher in the NaPico+MgCit group.CONCLUSIONS: Low-volume PEG preparations (PEG-CS+Bisacodyl, PEG-Asc) and NaPico+MgCit are noninferior to PEG-ELS in children, representing an attractive alternative to high-volume regimens in clinical practice. Because of the higher tolerability and acceptability profile, NaPico+MgCit would appear as the most suitable regimen for bowel preparation in children
2014
Bowel Preparations for Colonoscopy: An RCT / Giovanni Di Nardo; Marina Aloi; Salvatore Cucchiara; Cristiano Spada; Cesare Hassan; Fortunata Civitelli; Federica Nuti; Chiara Ziparo; Andrea Pession; Mario Lima; Giuseppe La Torre; Salvatore Oliva. - In: PEDIATRICS. - ISSN 0031-4005. - STAMPA. - 134:2(2014), pp. 1-8. [10.1542/peds.2014-0131]
Giovanni Di Nardo; Marina Aloi; Salvatore Cucchiara; Cristiano Spada; Cesare Hassan; Fortunata Civitelli; Federica Nuti; Chiara Ziparo; Andrea Pession; Mario Lima; Giuseppe La Torre; Salvatore Oliva
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/313322
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