Quality indicators for pediatric colonoscopy: results from a multicenter consortium - 31/05/16
Abstract |
Background and Aims |
Currently, there are no quality measures specific to children undergoing GI endoscopy. We aimed to determine the baseline quality of pediatric colonoscopy by using the Pediatric Endoscopy Database System—Clinical Outcomes Research Initiative (PEDS-CORI), a central registry.
Methods |
We conducted prospective data collection by using a standard computerized report generator and central registry (PEDS-CORI) to examine key quality indicators from 14 pediatric centers between January 2000 and December 2011. Specific quality indicators, including bowel preparation, ileal intubation rate, documentation of American Society of Anesthesiologists Physical Status Classification System (ASA) class, and procedure time, were compared during the study period.
Results |
We analyzed 21,807 colonoscopy procedures performed in patients with a mean age of 11.5 ± 4.8 years. Of the 21,807 reports received during the study period, 56% did not include bowel preparation quality, and 12.7% did not include ASA classification. When bowel preparation was reported, the quality was described as excellent, good, or fair in 90.3%. The overall ileal intubation rate was 69.4%, and 15.6% reported cecal intubation only, calculated to be 85% cecum or ileum intubation. Thus, 15% of colonoscopy procedures did not report reaching the cecum or ileum. When excluding the proportion of procedures not intended to reach the ileum (31.5%), the overall ileal intubation rate increased to 84.0%. The rate of ileum examination varied from 85% to 95%, depending on procedure indication.
Conclusions |
Colonoscopy reports from our central registry revealed significant variations and inconsistent documentation in pediatric colonoscopy. Our study identifies areas for quality improvement and highlights the need for developing accepted quality measures specific to pediatric endoscopy.
Il testo completo di questo articolo è disponibile in PDF.Abbreviations : ASA, PEDS-CORI
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| DISCLOSURE: The Clinical Outcomes Research Initiative (CORI) is supported with funding from NIDDK UO1 DK57132. In addition, CORI has received support from the following entities to support the infrastructure of the practice-based network: AstraZeneca, Bard International, Pentax USA, ProVation, Endosoft, GIVEN Imaging, and Ethicon. The commercial entities had no involvement in this research. All authors disclosed no financial relationships relevant to this publication. |
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| If you would like to chat with an author of this article, you may contact Dr Thakkar at thakkarsmail@gmail.com. |
Vol 83 - N° 3
P. 533-541 - marzo 2016 Ritorno al numeroBenvenuto su EM|consulte, il riferimento dei professionisti della salute.
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