Endoscopy International Open (Sep 2020)

Is sore throat an underreported and under-estimated quality indicator for endoscopic procedures? Results from a large prospective cohort

  • Katherine Kim,
  • Srinivas Gaddam,
  • John Verula,
  • Ellis Lai,
  • Ashley Dollentas,
  • Bee Hill,
  • Sarah Francis,
  • Shara Chess,
  • Simon Lo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1055/a-1223-2002
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 08, no. 10
pp. E1398 – E1404

Abstract

Read online

Background and study aims Patients often develop sore throat after upper endoscopy procedures but there data are very limited on the magnitude of the problem. The aim of this study was to evaluate and identify independent risk factors of sore throat in patients undergoing endoscopy. Patients and methods Data were collected prospectively on consecutive outpatient endoscopy procedures performed at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center from October 2018 to February 2019. Procedure nurses collected pre-procedure, intra-procedure, and immediate post-procedure surveys including evaluation of sore throat (pain scale from 1 – 10). Significant univariate variables (P 30 minutes) were risk factors for sore throat (all P < 0.05). On the multivariate analysis, independent risk-factors for post-procedure sore throat were oral DBE (odds ratio [OR] 5.2), oral airway (OR 4.8), general anesthesia (OR 2.7), fellow involvement (OR 2.5), oral EUS (OR 2.4), and female gender (OR 2.0). Conclusions Contrary to popular belief, our study found that post-procedural sore throat is more common (18 %) than previously reported. Two types of endoscopic procedures, two anesthesia maneuvers, female gender, and fellow involvement were all independent risk factors. This is of particular concern for interventionalists who perform EUS and oral DBE as these patients are at higher risk for sore throat.