| Literature DB >> 32128226 |
Fahima Dossa1,2, Catherine Dubé3,4, Jill Tinmouth2,4,5, Anne Sorvari6, Linda Rabeneck4,5, Bronwen R McCurdy4, Jason A Dominitz7, Nancy N Baxter1,2,4,6.
Abstract
Objective: Although sedation improves patient experience during colonoscopy, there is great jurisdictional variability in sedative practices. The objective of this study was to develop practice recommendations for the use of moderate and deep sedation in routine hospital-based colonoscopy to facilitate standardisation of practice. Design: We recruited 32 multidisciplinary panellists to participate in a modified Delphi process to establish consensus-based recommendations for the use of sedation in colonoscopy. Panel members participated in a values assessment survey followed by two rounds of anonymous online voting on preliminary practice recommendations. An inperson meeting was held between voting rounds to facilitate consensus-building. Consensus was defined as >60% agreement/disagreement with recommendation statements; >80% agreement/disagreement was considered indicative of strong consensus.Entities:
Keywords: colonoscopy; endoscopy; screening
Year: 2020 PMID: 32128226 PMCID: PMC7039579 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgast-2019-000348
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open Gastroenterol ISSN: 2054-4774
Figure 1Consensus-building process.
Figure 2Results of values assessment survey. Twenty-nine members of the expert panel participated in the values assessment survey. Panel members were provided with a list of 20 factors/outcomes and were asked to provide a score (1–10) indicating the importance of the factor in the generation of practice recommendations.
Results of small group sessions
| Who may need deep sedation for routine colonoscopy?* | |
| Patient factors | Contextual factors |
Chronic opiate users. Patients who have failed with moderate sedation in the past due to discomfort. Hypersensitivity to vomiting and nausea. History of sexual abuse. Selection of patients with irritable bowel syndrome, fibromyalgia, or previous diverticulitis. Patients with cognitive disabilities (eg, dementia). Paediatric patients. | Anaesthesiologist on hand/readily available. Smaller centres/hospitals may depend on anaesthesiologist as a revenue stream. May use anaesthesiologists because they need to provide them with enough cases to keep them employed. Patient preference. Lengthy/complex procedure (eg, endoscopic mucosal resection). Skill level of endoscopist. Patient is alone. |
| Prior to the procedure | |
Provide a friendly, clean environment for the patient. Educate the patient regardless of the sedation they will receive (standardised learning materials). Information about what to expect before, during, and after procedure. Start educating the patient as early as possible. Train all staff in proper education protocols. Prepare the patient for possibility of pain/discomfort. Communicate and listen to the patient. Address concerns and answer questions. Build rapport. Address language barriers, if necessary. Continual education/improvement for medical staff. Skill-enhancing courses for endoscopists and nurses. Ensure patients have a safe way home. | |
| During the procedure | |
Ensure the patient is comfortable (temperature of the room, choice in music, etc). ‘Time out’ before, during, and after the procedure where patient information (including relevant comorbidities and allergies), indications for the procedure, equipment required, findings, etc are reviewed. Use of anxiolytics to minimise recall of pain, when necessary. Communicate with the patient during the procedure (warn about any discomfort they might feel). Allow family member in the room with certain patients (eg, patients who are hearing impaired). Skilled intravenous (IV) placement. Patient-controlled sedation. Titration of sedation dosage. Start the patient lightly sedated and increase sedation, if necessary. Use of abdominal pressure and variation in patient positioning. Use carbon dioxide instead of air. Carbon dioxide helps in the recovery phase. Patients report less pain following procedure. Use of a scope guide. | |
| After the procedure | |
Confirm that patients have a safe way home. Provide next-day call or follow-up appointment. Emphasise that patient feedback is important and how it is used to improve patient experience. Provide contact information for patients to contact with questions or concerns. Patient rating cards provided to endoscopist (the patient rates comfort level during the procedure). Use patient feedback to improve. | |
Members of the multidisciplinary panel participated in two small group sessions during an inperson consensus-building meeting. The first small group session explored patient and contextual factors that may warrant the use of deep sedation in specific circumstances. The second small group session focused on how to improve patient experience under moderate sedation.
*The patient and contextual factors listed here are not meant to imply that deep sedation should be used if any of these factors are present. Rather, if ≥1 of these factors are present, endoscopists should consider, on a case-by-case basis, whether deep sedation is necessary.
Comparison of ASGE guidelines2 and consensus-based practice recommendations
| Category | ASGE guidelines | Consensus-based practice recommendations |
| Preprocedure risk assessment | ‘We recommend that all patients undergoing endoscopic procedures be evaluated to assess their risk of sedation related to pre-existing medical conditions’. | No recommendations provided. |
| Preferred sedative agent | ‘We recommend that the combination of an opioid and benzodiazepine is a safe and effective regimen for achieving minimal to moderate sedation for upper endoscopy and colonoscopy in patients without risk factors for sedation-related adverse events’. | All endoscopists performing colonoscopy should be able to complete colonoscopy safely and effectively (per accepted benchmarks) using moderate sedation or less. |
| Personnel capable of administering moderate sedation | ‘Minimal and/or moderate sedation can be delivered safely by endoscopists to patients who are ASA Class I, II, or III. Other candidates for minimal or moderate sedation include those with a history of previously successful procedures with moderate sedation and an expectation for moderate sedation as well as those undergoing a procedure that is expected to be uncomplicated or routine’. | For patients undergoing routine colonoscopy, endoscopists can safely administer moderate sedation with the assistance of a trained nurse. |
| Skills and training required of endoscopists | ‘We recommend that providers undergo specific training in the administration of endoscopic sedation and possess the skills necessary for the diagnosis and management of sedation-related adverse events, including rescue from a level of sedation deep than that intended’. | All endoscopists performing colonoscopy should be able to complete colonoscopy safely and effectively (per accepted benchmarks) using moderate sedation or less. |
| Personnel responsible for monitoring moderately sedated patients | ‘For moderate sedation, the personnel assigned to monitoring the patient can be assigned brief and interruptible tasks (such as mucosal biopsy), provided that the patient has not reached a state of deep sedation’. | For routine in-hospital colonoscopy under moderate sedation, a single RN can both monitor the patient and perform brief interruptible tasks. |
| Equipment required for monitoring sedated patients | ‘We recommend that routine monitoring of blood pressure, oxygen saturation, and heart rate in addition to clinical observation for changes in cardiopulmonary status during all endoscopic procedures using sedation. Supplemental oxygen administration should be considered for moderate sedation and should be administered during deep sedation. Supplemental oxygen should be administered if hypoxemia is anticipated or develops’. | No recommendations provided. |
| Techniques to enhance patient experience under moderate sedation | No recommendations provided. | |
| Reasons to consider use of deep sedation/propofol | ‘We suggest that endoscopists use propofol-based sedation (endoscopist-directed or anesthesia-provider administered) when it is expected to improve patient safety, comfort, procedural efficiency, and/or successful procedure completion’. | Select patients undergoing routine colonoscopy may benefit from deep sedation. |
| Reasons to involve an anaesthesia provider | ‘We recommend anesthesia provider-administered sedation be considered for complex endoscopic procedures or patients with multiple medical comorbidities or at risk for airway compromise’. | Select patients undergoing colonoscopy, such as those with severe comorbidities, may benefit from having sedation administered and monitored by an anaesthesia provider, irrespective of level of sedation (see |
| Personnel capable of administering deep sedation/propofol | ‘We suggest that endoscopists use propofol-based sedation (endoscopist-directed or anesthesia-provider administered)…’. | Deep sedation for colonoscopy should only be administered by an anaesthesia provider. |
| Personnel responsible for monitoring deeply sedated patients | ‘For deep sedation, personnel assigned to monitoring the patient must do so in a continuous and uninterrupted fashion’. | For routine colonoscopy under deep sedation, an anaesthesia provider will be responsible for monitoring the patient and should not be responsible for additional tasks. |
ASA, American Society of Anesthesiologists; ASGE, American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy.