Affiliation:
1. Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Westmead Hospital, Westmead, Australia
2. Medicine, The University of Sydney Westmead Clinical School, Westmead, Australia
3. Gastroenterology and Hepatology, The University of British Columbia Faculty of Medicine, Vancouver, Canada
Abstract
Abstract
Background and study aims Because of concerns about peri-procedural adverse events (AEs), guidelines recommend anesthetist-managed sedation (AMS) for long and complex endoscopic procedures. The safety and efficacy of physician-administered balanced sedation (PA-BS) for endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR) of large non-pedunculated colorectal polyps (LNPCPs) ≥20 mm is unknown.
Patients and methods We compared PA-BS with AMS in a retrospective study of prospectively collected data from consecutive patients referred for management of LNPCPs (NCT01368289; NCT02000141). A per-patient propensity analysis was performed following a 1:2 nearest-neighbor (Greedy-type) match, based on age, gender, Charlson comorbidity index, and lesion size. The primary outcome was any peri-procedural AE, which included hypotension, hypertension, tachycardia, bradycardia, hypoxia, and new arrhythmia. Secondary outcomes were unplanned admissions, 28-day re-presentation, technical success, and recurrence.
Results Between January 2016 and June 2020, 700 patients
underwent EMR for LNPCPs, of whom 638 received PA-BS. Among them, the median age was 70 years
(interquartile range [IQR] 62–76 years), size 35 mm (IQR 25–45 mm), and duration 35 minutes
(IQR 25–60 minutes). Peri-procedural AEs occurred in 149 (23.4%), most commonly bradycardia
(116; 18.2%). Only five (0.8%) required an unplanned sedation-related admission due to AEs (2
hypotension, 1 arrhythmia, 1 bradycardia, 1 hypoxia), with a median inpatient stay of 1 day
(IQR 1–3 days). After propensity-score matching, there were no differences between PA-BS and
AMS in peri-procedural AEs, unplanned admissions, 28-day re-presentation rates, technical
success or recurrence.
Conclusions Physician-administered balanced sedation for the EMR of LNPCPs is safe. Peri-procedural AEs are infrequent, transient, rarely require admission (<1%), and are experienced in similar frequencies to those receiving anesthetist-managed sedation.
Subject
Obstetrics and Gynecology
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1 articles.
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