Open Access
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 · Endosc Int Open 2021; 09(07): E986-E988
DOI: 10.1055/a-1399-8891
Editorial

Underutilization of societal guidelines: occasional or widespread?

Richard Kozarek
Digestive Disease Institute, Virginia Mason Medical Center, Seattle, Washington, United States
› Author Affiliations
 

The current publication by Issak et al, “Prophylactic rectal indomethacin and pancreatic duct stents (PPS) for prevention of post-ERCP pancreatitis (PEP) are underutilized in average and high-risk patients undergoing ERCP” [1], reviews 31,050 adults captured by the IBM Explorys database between 2014 and 2019. Patients were categorized by risk factors for PEP, which included female sex, age < 40 years, sphincter of Oddi dysfunction, history of acute pancreatitis, or pancreatic sphincterotomy at time of the procedure [2]. Average-risk patients had no risk factors, and patients were stratified for 0 to ≥ 3 risk factors. The database did not allow retrieval of other procedural risk factors for PEP to include multiple cannulation attempts, multiple pancreatic duct injections, pancreatic acinarization with contrast injection, or failure to use guidewire cannulation to selectively access the biliary tree; nor did it define the ERCP experience of the endoscopist or whether a trainee was involved in the procedure. The primary outcome of the study was to define the incidence of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) or pancreatic stent use in an attempt to decrease PEP. Secondary outcomes were prophylaxis for and incidence of PEP contingent upon number of risk factors. Not surprising was that as the number of risk factors increased, so too did PEP. What perhaps was surprising in this study was that only one-third of all patients undergoing ERCP received PEP prophylaxis. This included 82.4 % receiving rectal indomethacin and 12.4 % who had placement of a prophylactic pancreatic stent (PPS).

Despite multiple limitations of this study, to include its retrospective review of a database that provides a suboptimal diagnosis of PEP and fails to account for most procedural and endoscopist risk factors, it nevertheless is very clear that endoscopists in this database failed to adhere to societal guidelines to reduce the risk of PEP in two-thirds of the patients. These include recommendations by the ASGE and ESGE as well as from Japan [3] [4] [5].

Given the prospective and randomized controlled trials demonstrating the efficacy of rectal NSAIDs to reduce the risk and severity of PEP in average as well as high-risk patients [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11], these societal guidelines are clear that all patients undergoing ERCP should receive periprocedural rectal NSAIDS. Moreover, although there are no formal societal guidelines that recommend use of PPS, their use has been associated with a decreased risk of PEP in patients undergoing complex ERCP [10]. Such stents were placed in 4.3 % of these patients in this series, and only 1.6 % of these patients had both PPS and rectal indomethacin. Whether this “belt and suspenders” prophylaxis proves more effective than either technique alone to prevent PEP is unknown at the time but is currently undergoing study in the National Institutes of Health-sponsored stent vs indomethacin study (SVI).

So, what good are societal guidelines, most derived from a graded review of the literature, supplemented by expert opinion [12] [13] [14] [15], if they are not followed? And is this underutilization occasional or systemic? Furthermore, are there any repercussions of failure to follow them other than the potential for suboptimal patient outcomes? In other words, do they have any teeth such that failure to follow them leads to failure to become privileged in an endoscopy unit or censure of privilege by ignoring one or more specific guidelines? Is there a financial incentive to adhere to guidelines, or is there actually a perverse incentive to overuse certain endoscopic procedures despite guidelines?

The above are complex issues and perhaps beyond the scope of this editorial.

Guideline adherents point to improved patient outcomes and standardization of care, whereas those who fail to heed them cite contradictory recommendations, the continued evolution of guideline recommendations, and their profusion in all aspects of endoscopic practice leading to “cookbook care.” As such, we have evolved practice patterns to ensure compliance with screening and potentially banding cirrhotic patients to prevent an index variceal bleed [16]. We recommend screening of virtually all patients for colorectal cancer and variable surveillance intervals based upon initial findings, genetics, and family history [17] [18] [19] [20] [21]. We screen and variably surveille for Barrett’s esophagus and undertake or refer patients to experienced colleagues for endoscopic mucosal resection or endoscopic submucosal dissection with finding of high-grade dysplasia and high-risk patients with superficial malignancy [22] [23] [24] [25] [26]. We recognize that chromo-endoscopy finds more dysplasia with fewer biopsies then white light endoscopy with or without the ability to magnify the image or filter the wavelength, but without formal societal guidelines, it is the minority of endoscopists who utilize it in screening patients with inflammatory bowel disease [27] [28] [29]. However, there are guidelines to screen for gastric malignancy [30], to perform and interpret capsule endoscopy [31] appropriately, and about the appropriate application of endoscopic ultrasound [32], as well as dozens of other endoscopic procedures. Not to mention procedural sedation, the appropriate cessation intervals for various anticoagulants and the indications for periprocedural antibiotics.

That brings us back to the Issak et al manuscript in the current issue of Endoscopy International Open [1]. Was failure to treat patients undergoing ERCP with NSAIDs or PSP related to skepticism about the results of previous studies, ignorance of those studies, or as the authors suggest, inadequate access to rectal indomethacin (or skill set to place a PSP)? It is clear, at least in this instance, that underutilization of societal guidelines is widespread and that this failure can be associated with significant iatrogenic patient illness on the one hand and cumulative hospitalization-related expense, on the other. Without definitive consequences for non-adherence, guidelines are just that, guidelines.


Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.


Corresponding author

Richard Kozarek, MD
Virginia Mason Medical Center
1100 9th Avenue
Seattle, WA 98101
USA   
Fax: +1-206-341-0061   

Publication History

Article published online:
17 June 2021

© 2021. The Author(s). This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonDerivative-NonCommercial License, permitting copying and reproduction so long as the original work is given appropriate credit. Contents may not be used for commercial purposes, or adapted, remixed, transformed or built upon. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)

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