The mean number of adenomas per procedure should become the gold standard to measure the neoplasia yield of colonoscopy: A population-based cohort study

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TitreThe mean number of adenomas per procedure should become the gold standard to measure the neoplasia yield of colonoscopy: A population-based cohort study
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2014
AuteursDenis B, Sauleau EAndre, Gendre I, Exbrayat C, Piette C, Dancourt V, Foll Y, Hadad HAit, Bailly L, Perrin P
JournalDIGESTIVE AND LIVER DISEASE
Volume46
Pagination176-181
Date PublishedFEB
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1590-8658
Mots-clésAdenoma, Colonoscopy, Colorectal Neoplasms, Diagnosis, Mass screening, Occult blood, quality improvement, Standards
Résumé

{Background: Measuring adenoma detection is a priority in the quality improvement process for colonoscopy. Our aim was (1) to determine the most appropriate quality indicators to assess the neoplasia yield of colonoscopy and (2) to establish benchmark rates for the French colorectal cancer screening programme. Methods: Retrospective study of all colonoscopies performed in average-risk asymptomatic people aged 50-74 years after a positive guaiac faecal occult blood test in eight administrative areas of the French population-based programme. Results: We analysed 42,817 colonoscopies performed by 316 gastroenterologists. Endoscopists who had an adenoma detection rate around the benchmark of 35% had a mean number of adenomas per colonoscopy varying between 0.36 and 0.98. 13.9% of endoscopists had a mean number of adenomas above the benchmark of 0.6 and an adenoma detection rate below the benchmark of 35%, or inversely. Correlation was excellent between mean numbers of adenomas and polyps per colonoscopy (Pearson coefficient r = 0.90, p < 0.0001), better than correlation between mean number of adenomas and adenoma detection rate (r = 0.84

DOI10.1016/j.dld.2013.08.129