BMC Gastroenterology (Feb 2024)

Comparison of the efficacy and tolerability of elobixibat plus sodium picosulfate with magnesium citrate and split-dose 2-L polyethylene glycol with ascorbic acid for bowel preparation before outpatient colonoscopy: a study protocol for the multicentre, randomised, controlled E-PLUS trial

  • Kinichi Hotta,
  • Yosuke Otake,
  • Daisuke Yamaguchi,
  • Yuichi Shimodate,
  • Norihiro Hanabata,
  • Hiroaki Ikematsu,
  • Yohei Yabuuchi,
  • Yasushi Sano,
  • Ryo Shimoda,
  • Shinya Sugimoto,
  • Mari Oba,
  • Hiroyuki Takamaru,
  • Kouichiro Kimura,
  • Yoshihiro Kishida,
  • Kazunori Takada,
  • Sayo Ito,
  • Kenichiro Imai,
  • Kazuya Hosotani,
  • Tatsuro Murano,
  • Masayoshi Yamada,
  • Kensuke Shinmura,
  • Rio Takezawa,
  • Michito Tomonaga,
  • Yutaka Saito

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12876-024-03146-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background Sodium picosulfate (SP)/magnesium citrate (MC) and polyethylene glycol (PEG) plus ascorbic acid are recommended by Western guidelines as laxative solutions for bowel preparation. Clinically, SP/MC has a slower post-dose defaecation response than PEG and is perceived as less cleansing; therefore, it is not currently used for major bowel cancer screening preparation. The standard formulation for bowel preparation is PEG; however, a large dose is required, and it has a distinctive flavour that is considered unpleasant. SP/MC requires a small dose and ensures fluid intake because it is administered in another beverage. Therefore, clinical trials have shown that SP/MC is superior to PEG in terms of acceptability. We aim to compare the novel bowel cleansing method (test group) comprising SP/MC with elobixibat hydrate and the standard bowel cleansing method comprising PEG plus ascorbic acid (standard group) for patients preparing for outpatient colonoscopy. Methods This phase III, multicentre, single-blind, noninferiority, randomised, controlled, trial has not yet been completed. Patients aged 40–69 years will be included as participants. Patients with a history of abdominal or pelvic surgery, constipation, inflammatory bowel disease, or severe organ dysfunction will be excluded. The target number of research participants is 540 (standard group, 270 cases; test group, 270 cases). The primary endpoint is the degree of bowel cleansing (Boston Bowel Preparation Scale [BBPS] score ≥ 6). The secondary endpoints are patient acceptability, adverse events, polyp/adenoma detection rate, number of polyps/adenomas detected, degree of bowel cleansing according to the BBPS (BBPS score ≥ 8), degree of bowel cleansing according to the Aronchik scale, and bowel cleansing time. Discussion This trial aims to develop a “patient-first” colon cleansing regimen without the risk of inadequate bowel preparation by using both elobixibat hydrate and SP/MC. Trial registration Japan Registry of Clinical Trials (jRCT; no. s041210067; 9 September 2021; https://jrct.niph.go.jp/ ), protocol version 1.5 (May 1, 2023).

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