Advances in Bowel Preparations: New Formulation and Clinical Results

Adequate cleansing is essential for a thorough and accurate examination of the bowel during colonoscopy. Suboptimal preparation can lead to missed diagnoses, increased costs, and safety issues. Favorable bowel preparations are efficacious, safe, and cause as little patient discomfort as possible by limiting fluid volume, intolerance, and inconvenience. Split-dose (2-day) regimens address these concerns and are associated with better cleansing and higher patient satisfaction than with single-dose regimens. Nurses can play a key role in communicating the benefits of various bowel preparation options, including split dosing, to patients. A low-volume oral sulfate solution given as a split-dose regimen has been tested in randomized clinical trials and found to provide similar bowel cleaning to split-dose polyethylene glycol with electrolytes and ascorbic acid (PEG-EA). Superior cleaning was found when compared with single-dose polyethylene glycol with electrolytes (PEG-ELS), particularly in the cecum and ascending colon. With the exception of clinically insignificant changes in electrolytes, tolerability and safety were similar between patients taking oral sulfate solution and patients taking PEG-EA or PEG-ELS. Oral sulfate solution is a safe and effective low-volume bowel preparation for colonoscopy.

[1]  B. Cash,et al.  Are We Asking Too Much? Early Morning Split-dose Bowel Preparations: A Survey of Patientʼs Experiences and Opinions: 408 , 2010 .

[2]  D. Rex,et al.  Split-dose bowel preparation for colonoscopy and residual gastric fluid volume: an observational study. , 2010, Gastrointestinal endoscopy.

[3]  D. Rex,et al.  A randomized clinical study comparing reduced-volume oral sulfate solution with standard 4-liter sulfate-free electrolyte lavage solution as preparation for colonoscopy. , 2010, Gastrointestinal endoscopy.

[4]  M. Khan,et al.  Patient acceptance, convenience, and efficacy of single-dose versus split-dose colonoscopy bowel preparation. , 2010, Journal of clinical gastroenterology.

[5]  Michael D. Brown,et al.  A Randomized Trial of Standard vs. Split-dose Polyethylene Glycol Electrolyte (PEG-E) Bowel Preparation for Inpatient Colonoscopy: 2009 ACG/Olympus Award , 2009 .

[6]  J. D. Palma,et al.  A Randomized Clinical Study Evaluating the Safety and Efficacy of a New, Reduced-Volume, Oral Sulfate Colon-Cleansing Preparation for Colonoscopy , 2009, The American Journal of Gastroenterology.

[7]  J. Asplin,et al.  Intestinal and Renal Effects of Low-Volume Phosphate and Sulfate Cathartic Solutions Designed for Cleansing the Colon: Pathophysiological Studies in Five Normal Subjects , 2009, The American Journal of Gastroenterology.

[8]  Douglas K Rex,et al.  American College of Gastroenterology Guidelines for Colorectal Cancer Screening 2008 , 2022 .

[9]  Y. Niv,et al.  Preparation for Colonoscopy in Hospitalized Patients , 2007, Digestive Diseases and Sciences.

[10]  D. Heresbach,et al.  Systematic review: oral bowel preparation for colonoscopy , 2006, Alimentary pharmacology & therapeutics.

[11]  Jai Radhakrishnan,et al.  Acute phosphate nephropathy following oral sodium phosphate bowel purgative: an underrecognized cause of chronic renal failure. , 2005, Journal of the American Society of Nephrology : JASN.

[12]  Bernard Burnand,et al.  Impact of colonic cleansing on quality and diagnostic yield of colonoscopy: the European Panel of Appropriateness of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy European multicenter study. , 2005, Gastrointestinal endoscopy.

[13]  V. Sharma,et al.  Impact of colonoscopy preparation quality on detection of suspected colonic neoplasia. , 2003, Gastrointestinal endoscopy.

[14]  D. Rex,et al.  Impact of bowel preparation on efficiency and cost of colonoscopy , 2002, American Journal of Gastroenterology.

[15]  B. Schwetz Oral Sodium Phosphate , 2001 .

[16]  B. Schwetz New Drug for HIV-1 Infection , 2001 .

[17]  A. Barkun,et al.  Technology Status Evaluation report. Colonoscopy preparations. May 2001. , 2001, Gastrointestinal endoscopy.

[18]  C. E. Brady,et al.  Comparison of colon cleansing methods in preparation for colonoscopy. , 1984, Gastroenterology.

[19]  J. Fordtran,et al.  Pathogenesis of nephrocalcinosis after sodium phosphate catharsis to prepare for colonoscopy: Intestinal phosphate absorption and its effect on urine mineral and electrolyte excretion. , 2007, Human pathology.

[20]  Z. Kain,et al.  Practice guidelines for preoperative fasting and the use of pharmacologic agents to reduce the risk of pulmonary aspiration: application to healthy patients undergoing elective procedures: a report by the American Society of Anesthesiologist Task Force on Preoperative Fasting. , 1999, Anesthesiology.