Keywords Quality and logistical aspects - Performance and complications - Preparation
Introduction
Patients with spinal cord injury (SCI) suffer from neurogenic bowel alterations characterized
by impaired colonic motility, leading to decreased large bowel transport, constipation,
megacolon, diarrhea, and defecation difficulties [1 ]
[2 ]. If a colonoscopy is indicated, these neurogenic alterations hamper the entire endoscopic
procedure. Despite individualized, intensified, and extended protocols for bowel preparation,
the quality of cleansing remains inferior compared with the general population, leading
to more aborted or re-colonoscopies after additional cleansing maneuvers [3 ]
[4 ]
[5 ]
[6 ]
[7 ]. The colonoscopy consumes more time, presumably due to both additional bowel cleansing
and a technically challenging advance with augmented looping [3 ].
All available data are restricted to standard colonoscopy based on insufflation of
room air or carbon dioxide (CO2 ). Water exchange colonoscopy (WE) in the general population represents an efficacious
option supported by some expert endoscopists. This technique is premised on suctioning
all the gas from the lumen and instilling water instead [8 ]. This procedure improves patient acceptance [9 ]
[10 ] and facilitates insertion in technically challenging examinations [11 ]
[12 ] when a patient is not sedated, improves cleanliness [13 ] and, last but not least, improves the adenoma detection rate (ADR) [14 ]
[15 ]
[16 ]
[17 ]
[18 ]
[19 ]. In addition, the resulting water column reduces loop formation during sigma passage
[20 ] so that WE succeeds more easily in previously incomplete examinations [21 ].
On the other hand, residual feces impede insertion during endoscopy [22 ] and the frequently insufficient bowel cleansing of SCI patients might also lead
to lower success rates, impaired quality, and even more adverse events (AEs). Because
no data have been reported on outcomes of WE in SCI patients, we retrospectively compared
completeness and other quality parameters in consecutive SCI patients who had undergone
WE with a group of CO2 -based colonoscopies in SCI patients, on the one hand, and WE in non-injured patients,
on the other hand.
Patients and methods
Study population
Consecutive patients with chronic SCI (≥ 6 months) who had undergone elective WE between
February 2021 and March 2022 were included in a retrospective cohort study. All SCI
subjects were treated as inpatients in a specialized SCI unit and referred to the
associated endoscopy unit (University Hospital Bergmannsheil, Bochum, Germany). Non-SCI
patients with WE in the same time period and SCI patients who had a CO2 -based colonoscopy between January 2016 and December 2020 served as controls. Emergency
examinations and patients with previous resecting large bowel surgery were excluded.
Clinical data acquisition
Clinical data, such as demographic characteristics, previous bowel surgery, comorbidities,
medication, laboratory and sedation parameters, and indication and results of the
colonoscopy, and histological assessment were collected from the electronic database.
All parameters were studied at the time of endoscopy. The severity of SCI was classified
according to the International Standards for Neurological Classification of Spinal
Cord Injury of the American Society of Spinal Cord Injury (ASIA) including the ASIA
Impairment Scale (AIS) [23 ]. The Charlson Comorbidity Index was calculated according to Charlson and colleagues
[24 ].
Objectives
The primary objective was to evaluate the completeness of WEs in SCI patients as defined
by intubation of the terminal ileum and/or cecum. Secondary objectives included duration
of the entire endoscopy, insertion and drawback time, cleansing level during cecum
insertion and drawback, polyp detection rate (PDR), ADR, and occurrence of AEs such
as bleeding, perforation, and death related to the endoscopy.
Colonoscopy procedure
All colonoscopies were performed at the university hospital Berufsgenossenschaftliches
Universitätsklinikum Bergmannsheil gGmbH, Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology,
Ruhr University Bochum, Germany, by one very experienced endoscopist (TB, > 5000 gas-based
colonoscopies), who started WE in October 2020 with colonoscopes Olympus CF-180L and
CF-190L; the first of the consecutive WEs that was included for analysis was number
33. Bowel cleansing was performed as previously described [3 ]. Flexible recto-sigmoidoscopies or sigmoidoscopies were excluded if they were initially
intended to remain incomplete. Primarily intended complete but abandoned colonoscopies
were included. Complete colonoscopy was defined by intubation of the cecum and/or
terminal ileum. A scope guide or fluoroscopy was never used. A lack of cecum insertion
was defined as the inability to push the colonoscope tip forward during insertion
despite manual maneuvers. Carbon dioxide insufflation was used routinely for air-driven
standard colonoscopy. WE was performed according to Cadoni and Ishaq [8 ]. In summary, all colonic air was suctioned from the colon and replaced by sterile
distilled water (AQUA B. Braun, Melsungen, Germany). If vision was blurred by feces,
the liquid stool was removed and replaced with fresh water until sufficient visibility
was achieved.
A propofol mono sedation was administered on demand as non-anesthesiologist-administered
sedation, according to national and international guidelines [25 ]
[26 ]
[27 ]. A person who had patient sedation as their sole task monitored the patient. The
effect of bowel cleansing was determined by means of a five-step scale (excellent,
good, fair, poor, very poor) during both insertion and drawback considering the entire
colon; the evaluation was realized resembling the Harefield Cleansing Scale (Supplementary Fig. S1 ) [28 ]. Any AEs associated with the colonoscopy or sedation were recorded.
Histological assessment
All polyps detected were removed during colonoscopy. Histological assessments were
performed by an expert gastrointestinal pathologist according to current guidelines
[29 ]. Polyps were divided into adenomatous and non-adenomatous polyps [30 ]. High-grade adenomas, villous history, or size ≥ 10 mm were regarded as advanced
adenomas [31 ].
Matching procedure
Consecutive WE-SCI patients who were included, as described above, provided the base
for the matching process. The investigators identified matching subjects from the
database in a 1:1:1 ratio based on age (± 5 years) and gender. The first group consisted
of consecutive SCI patients who had undergone elective CO2 -based colonoscopy. The second group comprised non-injured patients who had undergone
elective WE; these patients were also matched according to the time of performance
(± 3 months) to avoid effects from a potential learning curve.
Statistics
Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS, version 27.0 (SPSS Inc, United States).
Categorial and nominal data were indicated as absolute values and relative frequencies.
The arithmetic mean with standard deviation was used for metric variables; the Charlson
comorbidity index was given as the median. Interference statistics were realized using
analysis of variance, Pearson’s Chi-squared test and paired t -test were used, as appropriate. P <0.05 was regarded as significant.
Ethical concerns
The study protocol was approved by the institutional review board of the Ruhr University
Bochum [registry number 22-7450-BR] based on the ethical guidelines of the Declaration
of Helsinki and its later revisions. Informed consent was obtained from all patients
before colonoscopy. Informed consent for this study was exempted by the institutional
review board.
Results
Thirty-one of 33 SCI patients who had undergone WE were eligible for inclusion ([Fig. 1 ]). The remaining two cases were excluded due to prior bowel resection. As intended,
there were no differences regarding the matching parameters gender and age ([Table 1 ]).
Fig. 1 Flowchart of inclusion.
Table 1 Basic demographic characteristics.
WE-SCI
n = 31 (%)
CO2 -SCI
n = 31 (%)
WE-GP
n = 31 (%)
P value
*Matching criteria.
SCI, spinal cord injury; SD, standard deviation; WBC, white blood cell count; CRP,
C-reactive protein; INR, international normalized ratio; PTT, partial thromplastin
time; CCI, Charlson Comorbidity Index.
Statistics were analyzed withANOVA, Chi-squared test or t -test as appropriate.
Age (years, mean ± SD)*
61.1 ±12.9
60.8 ± 12.2
61.6 ± 12.8
0.963
Gender (male)*
25 (80.6)
25 (80.6)
25 (80.6)
1.000
ASA (mean ± SD)
2.4 ± 0.9
2.6 ± 0.9
2.3 ± 0.9
0.667
ASA scoring
0.420
1
4 (12.9)
4 (12.9)
6 (19.4)
2
13 (41.9)
9 (29.0)
11 (35.5)
3
11 (35.5)
13 (41.9)
12 (38.7)
4
3 (9.7)
5 (16.1)
2 (6.5)
Laboratory parameters
Hemoglobin (g/dL)
12.6 ± 2.1
13.0 ± 2.2
13.1 ± 2.3
0.789
WBC (/nL)
7.5 ± 4.2
7.5 ± 2.5
6.9 ± 1.9
0.531
Platelets (/nL)
239 ± 86
226 ± 59
246 ± 107
0.537
CRP (mg/dL)
2.8 ± 3.2
2.9 ± 4.2
1.7 ± 2.5
0.529
INR
1.1 ± 0.1
1.2 ± 0.7
1.1 ± 0.2
0.748
PTT (sec)
31 ± 4
33 ± 8
29 ± 6
0.060
CCI
1
1
1
0.702
Demographic characteristics
The mean age of the whole cohort was 61.2 ± 12.5 years. The vast majority of the patients
were male (n = 75, 80.6%). There were slight differences regarding comorbidities and
medication in the WE-GP group compared with both SCI groups ([Table 1 ], Supplementary Table S1 and Supplementary Table S2 ). The mean hemoglobin value averaged 12.9 ± 2.2 g/dL (minimum 6.8 g/dL, maximum 17.6
g/dL), the white blood cell count measured 7.3 ± 3.0 per nL (3.2–26.5/nL), and the
platelets, 236 ± 85/nL (70–603/nL). The mean international normalized ratio was 1.1
± 0.4 (0.9–4.8) and the partial thromboplastin time 31 ± 6 seconds (24–68 seconds).
The average value for C-reactive protein was 2.6 ± 3.5 mg/dL (0.1–19.0 mg/dL).
Characterization of SCI injury patterns
The mean duration of SCI was 266 ± 180 months. A total of 19.4% of patients (n = 18)
suffered from an injury at the cervical level, 40.9% (n = 38) from thoracic and 6%
(n = 6.5) from lumbar injury. The AIS score consisted of grade A in 46 (49.5%), grade
B in two (2.2%), grade C in 12 (12.9%) and grade D in two cases (2.2%). Data were
comparable in both SCI groups ([Table 2 ]).
Table 2 Spinal cord injury characteristics.
WE-SCI
n (%)
CO2 -SCI
n (%)
P value
SCI, spinal cord injury; AIS, ASIA impairment scale.
* Statistics were analyzed by paired t -test.
† Statistics were analyzed by ANOVA.
‡ Including multiple sclerosis and spina bifida.
Duration since SCI [months]
261 ± 167
216 ± 159
0.396*
Etiology of SCI
0.478†
Trauma
17 (38.6)
21 (47.7)
Infection
0 (0)
1 (2.3)
Neoplasia
0 (0)
0 (0)
Other‡
2 (4.5)
3 (6.8)
AIS classification
0.875†
Grade A
14 (31.8)
19 (43.2)
Grade B
1 (2.3)
0 (0)
Grade C
4 (9.1)
5 (11.4)
Grade D
0 (0)
1 (2.3)
Level of injury
0.104†
Cervical
8 (18.2)
8 (18.2)
Thoracic
10 (22.7)
16 (36.4)
Lumbar
1 (2.3)
1 (2.3)
Indications and procedure outcomes
Only a minority of colonoscopies were performed for screening purposes (9.7%), with
slight but significant differences between the groups (Supplementary Table S3 ). There were no screening cases in the CO2 -SCI group, whereas the SCI patients in the WE group represented the highest rate;
the general population lay exactly between the SCI groups. Most endoscopies were indicated
by at least one symptom. The symptoms were, in decreasing order, anemia and overt
or occult bleeding (29.3%), constipation (25.3%), abdominal pain (20.2%), follow-up
(13.1%), weight loss (7.1%), diarrhea (6.1%) and miscellaneous, covering perioperative
setting, intended polypectomy, quest for malignancy, and vegetative dysregulation,
i.e. sweating, hypertension, tachycardia, elevated body temperature, and anal secretion
(9.1%). Constipation, which was more common among both SCI groups (30.3% vs. 36.4%
vs. 9.1%, Chi-squared test P = 0.028), represented the only significant difference.
A total of 24 colonoscopies (24.2%) resulted in a normal finding (Supplementary Table S4 ). The pathologies included, in decreasing order, polyps (51.5%), any kind of inflammation
(17.2%), diverticula (21.2%), anal prolapse (15.2%), angiodysplasia (1.0%), carcinoma
(1.0%) and miscellaneous (3.0%), covering anal fissure and pseudomelanosis coli. All
features were equally distributed among the groups except for anal prolapse, which
occurred equally often in both groups of SCI patients but not in the WE-GP group (24.2%
and 21.2% vs. 0.0%, Chi-squared test P = 0.011).
The WE-GP group required propofol sedation more often (93.5% vs. 71.0% vs. 64.5%,
P <0.05), and needed higher doses than the WE-SCI and CO2 -SCI groups (0.151 ± 0.077 mg/minute vs. 0.151 ± 0.051 mg/minute vs. 0.209 ± 0.090
mg/minute, P <0.05). No sedation-associated AEs occurred.
Intubation of the cecum and the terminal ileum was achieved in every case in both
WE groups (100.0%, [Table 1 ]), whereas the respective intubation was possible in 29 (93.5%, ns) and 20 cases
(64.5%, P <0.001) in the CO2 -SCI group. The duration of the insertion and the entire colonoscopy did not differ
between the SCI groups, whereas both the insertion and total procedure times were
shorter in the WE-GP group than in the SCI groups. The low impact of the experience
with water exchange technique is displayed in Supplementary Fig. S3 ; only the first 20 WEs consumed more time than the later examinations. The drawback
time was comparable among the three groups.
Similarly, the cleansing level during cecum insertion did not differ between the SCI
groups, whereas the WE-GP group had significantly better bowel preparation. Both WE
groups had significantly better cleansing results during drawback than the CO2 -SCI group ([Fig. 2 ]). Based on the five-step scale, the improvement in cleansing was significantly higher
in the WE-SCI group compared with the CO2 -SCI and WE-GP groups (1.4 ± 0.8 vs. 0.8 ± 0.8 vs. vs. 0.6 ± 0.6, P =.001). Regarding both WE groups, the time needed for insertion increased from an
excellent to a very poor cleansing level (analysis of variance, P <0.001; Supplementary Fig. S2 ).
Fig. 2 Cleansing level during drawback. Statistics were analyzed by Chi-squared test (**Significant
with P <0.01).
Several endoscopic interventions were applied in 42 cases (42.4%), including polypectomy,
piecemeal mucosectomy, argon plasma coagulation, and full-thickness resection. Any
AEs were very rare; only one case of bleeding occurred in the WE-SCI group several
days after a piecemeal mucosectomy of a laterally spreading adenoma of the rectum.
Polyp and adenoma detection
The size of the polyps ranged from 2 to 25 mm. The PDR varied between 42% and 61%,
but did not differ significantly between the groups ([Table 3 ]). Given the fact that in one case, two polyps could not be retrieved, and they were
regarded as non-adenomatous polyp, the ADR (46% vs. 33% vs. 33%, ns) and the average
number of adenomas resected (1.2 ± 1.8 vs. 0.9 ± 1.7 vs. 0.9 ± 1.7, ns) were numerically,
but not significantly highest in the WE-SCI group. Some of these cases comprised adenomas
with high-grade dysplasia and sessile serrated adenomas.
Table 3 General outcome and results of colonoscopies.
WE-SCI
n = 31 (%)
CO2 -SCI
n = 31 (%)
WE-GP
n = 31 (%)
P value
SD, standard deviation; PPP, polyps per participant; PDR, polyp detection rate; ADR,
adenoma detection rate; APP, adenomas per participant; SSA, sessile serrated adenoma;
NAAS, non-anesthesiologist-administered sedation.
Statistics were analyzed with ANOVA, Chi-squared test or t -test as appropriate
*Significant with P <0.05.
**Significant with P <0.01.
Cecal intubation
31 (100.0)
29 (93.5)
31 (100.0)
0.132
Ileal intubation
31 (100.0)
23 (69.7)**
31 (100.0)
<0.001
Duration of examination (minutes)
Insertion
23:17 ± 10:17
22:12 ± 16:48
13:38 ± 07:00**
0.005
Drawback
20:17 ± 18:18
17:46 ± 09:41
15:35 ± 08:03
0.356
Total
43:35 ± 21:39
39:58 ± 19:31
29:14 ± 11:10**
0.007
Cleansing Level during insertion**
<0.001
1
2 (6.5)
3 (9.7)
14 (45.2)
2
6 (19.4)
3 (9.7)
8 (25.8)
3
13 (41.9)
11 (35.5)
5 (16.1)
4
7 (22.6)
11 (35.5)
3 (9.7)
5
3 (9.7)
3 (9.7)
1 (3.2)
Cleansing Level during drawback**
<0.001
1
15 (48.4)
4 (12.9)
23 (74.2)
2
13 (41.9)
12 (38.7)
4 (12.9)
3
2 (6.5)
9 (29.0)
4 (12.9)
4
1 (3.2)
6 (19.4)
0 (0)
5
0 (0)
0 (0)
0 (0)
Improvement of bowel cleansing**
1.4 ± 0.8
0.8 ± 0.8
0.6 ± 0.6
<0.001
Polyp and adenoma characteristics
PPP
1.7 ± 1.9
1.2 ± 1.5
1.3 ± 2.0
0.736
PDR
0.61
0.55
0.42
0.306
APP
1.2 ± 1.8
0.9 ± 1.7
0.9 ± 1.7
0.605
ADR
15 (45.5)
11 (33.3)
11 (33.3)
0.394
High-grade dysplasia
2 (6.1)
1 (3.0)
0 (0.0)
0.468
SSA
2 (6.1)
2 (6.1)
3 (4.1)
0.530
Smallest polyp (mm)
2 (in 9.1 %)
2 (in 12.1 %)
2 (in 9.1 %)
0.678
Largest polyp (mm)
20
8
25
0.680
Endoscopic intervention
15 (45.5)
15 (45.5)
12 (36.4)
0.742
Adverse events
1 (3.2)
0 (0)
0 (0)
0.372
Perforation
0 (0)
0 (0)
0 (0)
n/a
Bleeding
1 (3.2)
0 (0)
0 (0)
0.372
Sedation
0 (0)
0 (0)
0 (0)
n/a
Other
0 (0)
0 (0)
0 (0)
n/a
NAAS
22 (71.0)
20 (64.5)
29 (93.5)*
0.018
Propofol dose (mg/minute)
0.151 ± 0.077
0.151 ± 0.051
0.209 ± 0.090*
0.011
Discussion
This thoroughly matched retrospective cohort study indicates that the water exchange
technique offers the potential to substantially improve the quality and outcome of
colonoscopy in patients with SCI. First, water exchange resulted in exclusively complete
colonoscopies even in SCI patients; the cecum and the terminal ileum were intubated
in all cases and exceeded the results from CO2 -based colonoscopies. Of note, in this study, even the CO2 -SCI group achieved better results than had been described previously [3 ]
[4 ]
[5 ]
[6 ]
[7 ]; in this particular setting of SCI patients, the current literature reports a high
proportion of abandoned colonoscopies that are claimed to remain incomplete in up
to one-quarter of cases [6 ]. This discrepancy in the literature might have contributed to the fact that intubation
of the terminal ileum, but not that of the cecum, achieved statistical significance.
We assume that the extensive training and experience of the endoscopist, and all the
staff in the endoscopy unit, with SCI patient colonoscopies was responsible for the
high rates of cecal intubation in the CO2 -SCI group. Furthermore, the whole team that was involved in patient bowel preparation
has gained special insights and knowledge over time, so that patients in the study
achieved better cleansing results before they were referred to endoscopy for the first
time.
Second, the cleansing level during drawback was significantly better in both WE groups
compared with the CO2 group ([Fig. 3 ]). Because there were no differences in bowel preparation during insertion, the remarkable
cleansing results in the WE-SCI group can be attributed to the water exchange technique.
As expected from previous studies [3 ]
[6 ], bowel preparation was significantly better in the WE-GP group. Although colonoscopy
is the most sensitive means for detection of colorectal cancer and precursor lesions
in the general population and has been proposed for screening in several guidelines
[32 ]
[33 ], it is associated with particular limitations in patients with SCI, such as more
intense but less effective bowel preparation [5 ] and frequently incomplete examinations [6 ]. None of the data refer to the consequences of poorer bowel preparation and technically
challenging colonoscopy in SCI patients, but lower preparation quality may result
in an increased risk of missing neoplasia [34 ] and the need for repeated colonoscopy after prior incomplete examination [35 ].
Fig. 3 Frequency of intubation of the terminal ileum and the cecum. Statistics were analyzed
by Chi-squared test (**Significant with P <0.01). Further data are detailed in [Table 3 ].
In the current study, insertion time was comparable between both SCI groups and was
lower in cases with excellent or good bowel preparation. In the few cases with an
excellent grade of preparation, WE was associated with the shortest insertion time
(Supplementary Table S5 ). This effect was no longer detectable when the cleansing level declined. Therefore,
we hypothesize that significant time is spent in order to clean the bowel from residual
feces. Nevertheless, the additional cleansing maneuvers seem to be more effective
in WE-SCI. Although these maneuvers may consume more time, the resulting water column
in the colon may facilitate insertion.
Unfortunately, we did not measure the amount of instilled and retrieved water. In
the current study, the cleansing level was given as an integrated five-step scale
estimation over the entire colon, both for insertion and drawback. Despite this loss
of complexity, the scoring during insertion was associated with what was probably
the most relevant outcome parameter for this study, i.e. the time spent for insertion
(Supplementary Fig. S2 and Supplementary Fig. S3 ). A similar effect was seen during drawback, where an equal scoring system derived
from the Harefield Cleansing Scale was applied [28 ].
The fact that all colonoscopies were performed by a single operator with particular
experience in endoscopy of SCI patients limits the interpretation and generalizability
of the data. On the other hand, experience with WE was limited, although a relevant
learning curve was not detectable (Supplementary Fig. S3 ). Our matching protocol took into consideration the time of performance to compensate
for potential effects associated with the learning curve. Hence, a homogenous and
comparable WE control group resulted. The CO2 -SCI group consisted of historic SCI colonoscopies. Matching afforded the inclusion
of patients for whom data had been collected over nearly 5 years. In fact, neither
the bowel preparation protocols, endoscopy nor reporting standards have changed, so
that both SCI groups are largely comparable. The limited sample size hampered deeper
analysis and referred to quality parameters. Because this cohort study, as the first
to address WE in SCI patients, was intended as a proof-of-concept study, the promising
results encourage us to investigate the effect on ADR in future studies.
Conclusions
In this retrospective proof-of-concept concept study with a limited sample size, WE
compensated for differences in quality measures of colonoscopies between SCI patients
and the general population without increasing the risk of AEs. Hence, a prospective
randomized trial is not only feasible but even mandatory in order to confirm the results
in detail. Until then, we encourage endoscopists in specialized centers to use WE
as the standard technique in patients with SCI.