Effectiveness of using a patient education mobile application to improve the quality of bowel preparation: a randomised controlled trial

Author:

Dao Hang VietORCID,Dao Quan Viet,Lam Hoa NgocORCID,Hoang Long BaoORCID,Nguyen Van Thi,Nguyen Thuy Thi,Vu Dat Quoc,Pokorny Christopher S,Nguyen Hoa Lan,Allison Jeroan,Goldberg Robert Joel,Dao An Thi Minh,Do Toan Thanh Thi,Dao Long Van

Abstract

AimsTo determine the effectiveness of a mobile application (app) in improving the quality of bowel preparation for colonoscopy.MethodAn endoscopist-blinded randomised controlled trial enrolled patients who were undergoing a colonoscopy on the same day of bowel preparation. The intervention used a Vietnamese mobile app that provides instructions on bowel preparation while patients in the comparison group received conventional instructions. Outcomes included the Boston Bowel Preparation Scale (BBPS) to assess the quality of bowel preparation and the polyp detection rate (PDR) and adenoma detection rate (ADR).ResultsThe study recruited 515 patients (256 in the intervention group). The median age was 42 years, 50.9% were females, 69.1% high school graduates and higher, and 45.2% from urban area. Patients in the intervention group had higher adherence to instructions (60.9% vs 52.4%, p=0.05) and longer length of taking laxatives (mean difference 0.17 hours, 95% CI 0.06 to 0.27). The intervention did not reduce the risk of poor bowel cleansing (total BBPS<6) in both overall (7.4% vs 7.7%; risk ratio 0.96, 95% CI 0.53 to 1.76) and subgroup analysis. PDR and ADR were similar between the two groups.ConclusionsThe mobile app providing instructions on proper bowel preparation improved the practice during bowel preparation but did not improve the quality of bowel cleansing or PDR.

Funder

The Fogarty International Center of the U.S National Institutes of Health

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Gastroenterology

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