Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA.
Digestive Health Center, Northwestern Medicine, 676 N. St. Clair, Suite 1400, Chicago, IL, 60611, USA.
Dig Dis Sci. 2021 Aug;66(8):2578-2584. doi: 10.1007/s10620-020-06539-1. Epub 2020 Aug 16.
COVID-19 has caused a backlog of endoscopic procedures; colonoscopy must now be prioritized to those who would benefit most. We determined the proportion of screening and surveillance colonoscopies appropriate for rescheduling to a future year through strict adoption of US Multi-Society Task Force (USMSTF) guidelines.
We conducted a single-center observational study of patients scheduled for "open-access colonoscopy"-ordered by a primary care provider without being seen in gastroenterology clinic-over a 6-week period during the COVID-19 pandemic. Each chart was reviewed to appropriately assign a surveillance year per USMSTF guidelines including demographics, colonoscopy history and family history. When guidelines recommended a range of colonoscopy intervals, both a "conservative" and "liberal" guideline adherence were assessed.
We delayed 769 "open-access" screening or surveillance colonoscopies due to COVID-19. Between 14.8% (conservative) and 20.7% (liberal), colonoscopies were appropriate for rescheduling to a future year. Conversely, 415 (54.0%) patients were overdue for colonoscopy. Family history of CRC was associated with being scheduled too early for both screening (OR 3.9; CI 1.9-8.2) and surveillance colonoscopy (OR 2.6, CI 1.0-6.5). The most common reasons a colonoscopy was inappropriately scheduled this year were failure to use new surveillance colonoscopy intervals (28.9%), incorrectly applied family history guidelines (27.2%) and recommending early surveillance colonoscopy after recent normal colonoscopy (19.3%).
Up to one-fifth of patients scheduled for "open-access" colonoscopy can be rescheduled into a future year based on USMSTF guidelines. Rigorously applying guidelines could judiciously allocate colonoscopy resources as we recover from the COVID-19 pandemic.
COVID-19 导致内镜检查积压;现在必须优先考虑对最受益的人进行结肠镜检查。我们通过严格采用美国多学会工作组(USMSTF)指南,确定了将筛查和监测结肠镜检查重新安排到下一年的适当比例。
我们对在 COVID-19 大流行期间的 6 周内,由初级保健提供者预约但未在胃肠病诊所就诊的“开放接入结肠镜检查”患者进行了一项单中心观察性研究。根据 USMSTF 指南,对每一份病历进行了审查,以适当分配监测年份,包括人口统计学、结肠镜检查史和家族史。当指南建议结肠镜检查间隔范围时,评估了“保守”和“自由”两种指南依从性。
我们因 COVID-19 而推迟了 769 例“开放接入”筛查或监测结肠镜检查。在保守和自由两种情况下,分别有 14.8%(保守)和 20.7%(自由)的结肠镜检查适合重新安排到下一年。相反,有 415 例(54.0%)患者的结肠镜检查已经逾期。CRC 家族史与筛查和监测结肠镜检查的提前安排有关(筛查 OR 3.9;CI 1.9-8.2;监测 OR 2.6,CI 1.0-6.5)。今年结肠镜检查不适当安排的最常见原因是未使用新的监测结肠镜检查间隔(28.9%)、不正确应用家族史指南(27.2%)和在最近正常结肠镜检查后建议早期监测结肠镜检查(19.3%)。
根据 USMSTF 指南,多达五分之一的“开放接入”结肠镜检查患者可以重新安排到下一年。在我们从 COVID-19 大流行中恢复的过程中,严格遵循指南可以明智地分配结肠镜检查资源。