AI Article Synopsis

  • Prophylactic closure using clips after endoscopic resections helps decrease the risk of delayed hemorrhage, particularly for larger non-pedunculated colorectal lesions removed using electrocautery.
  • Cold resections, which are less invasive and have a lower risk of bleeding, generally do not require clip closure, and audit of clip usage revealed varying and often unnecessary application for smaller lesions.
  • A study involving 3,784 colorectal lesions showed that clip placement was significantly more common after electrocautery (71.1%) compared to cold resection (3.9%), indicating potential areas for improving practice and reducing waste in outpatient colonoscopy procedures.

Article Abstract

Prophylactic closure of endoscopic resection defects reduces delayed hemorrhage after resection of non-pedunculated colorectal lesions ≥ 20 mm that are located proximal to the splenic flexure and removed by electrocautery. The risk of delayed hemorrhage after cold (without electrocautery) resection is much lower, and prophylactic clip closure after cold resection is generally unnecessary. The aim of this study was to audit clip use after colorectal polyp resection in routine outpatient colonoscopies at two outpatient centers within an academic medical center. Patients referred for resection of known lesions were excluded. Retrospective chart analysis was performed as part of a quality review of physician adherence to screening and post-polypectomy surveillance intervals. Among 3784 total lesions resected cold by 29 physicians, clips were placed after cold resection on 41.7% of 12 lesions ≥ 20 mm, 19.3% of 207 lesions 10 to 19 mm in size, and 2.8% of 3565 lesions 1 to 9 mm in size. Three physicians placed clips after cold resection of lesions 1 to 9 mm in 18.8%, 25.5%, and 45.0% of cases. These physicians accounted for 8.1% of 1- to 9-mm resections, but 69.7% of clips placed in this size range. Electrocautery was used for 3.1% of all resections. Clip placement overall after cold resection (3.9%) was much lower than after resection with electrocautery (71.1%), but 62.4% of all clips placed were after cold resection. Audits of clip use in an endoscopy practice can reveal surprising findings, including high and variable rates of unnecessary use after cold resection. Audit can potentially reduce unnecessary costs, carbon emissions, and plastic waste.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11039037PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/a-2284-9739DOI Listing

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