High Quality Screening Colonoscopy Colonoscopy is a common endoscopic procedure, with more than 3 million examinations performed in the United States annually.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
CT COLONOGRAPHY. CRC TRENDS  Incidence decreased by 7%  Mortality decreased by 20%  Five year survival rates increased by 12%
Advertisements

March is COLORECTAL CANCER AWARENESS Month
A Quality Colonoscopy: Are You Providing One?
Colorectal Cancer Screening 101
1 CRF/CPEST Regional Teleconference February 18, 2009 Session Two.
EQUIP Training session 1
Bowel Preparation Regimens Danielle Goodrich, MSIV University of Maryland School of Medicine.
Screening for Colorectal Cancer Cancer Symposium: Measuring the Benefits of Screening and Treatment October 2007.
DR Jameel Tariq Miro.  Lifetime incidence 5%  90% of cases occur after age 50  One-third of patients with colorectal cancer die from the disease 
CHARACTERISTICS OF PATIENTS WITH COLORECTAL CANCER IN NORTHWESTERN GREECE Dimitrios Christodoulou, Ioannis Mitselos, Chrisanthi Tzika, Epameinondas V.
CT COLONOSCOPY. Turki Alhazmi,MB.CHB, FRCPC, dABR Interventional Radiology-Body MRI Ass. Prof. Faculty of Medicine Umm Al Qura University Makkah-Saudi.
 2 nd overall leading cause of cancer death in the United States › 3 rd in each sex  Approximately 6% of individuals in the US will develop a cancer.
Colorectal cancer in Norway Maria Mai Ingvild Hvalby.
Colon-Rectal Cancer Keith Bradley, MD National Alliance of Research Associates Programs NARAP.
Clinical Practice Screening for Colorectal Cancer David A. Lieberman, M.D. N Engl J Med Volume 361(12): September 17, 2009.
Update on Colorectal Cancer Screening Tests Source: Levin Bernard et al. Screening and Surveillance for the Early Detection of Colorectal Cancer and Adenomatous.
Colorectal cancer Khayal AlKhayal MD,FRCSC
1 The Chemoprevention of Sporadic Colorectal Cancer Issues Surrounding a Benefit/Risk Analysis in Clinical Trials Mark Avigan MD CM Medical Officer Division.
A Colonscope is used to remove or biopsy polyps  Night Prep.
Benchmarking For Colonoscopy
A CMH Community DocTalk with Robert Wayne, MD, FACS.
D. M. Kruss MD Kill the Cancer Do Screening now! Daniel M. Kruss, M.D. Kill the Cancer Do Screening now! Daniel M. Kruss, M.D.
Colonoscopic surveillance for prevention of colorectal cancer in people with ulcerative colitis, Crohn’s disease or adenomas NICE CG March 2011.
High risk population in GI field how we can find them? Ahmad Shavakhi MD Associate professor of gastroenterology.
Andreas Adler Charité Medical University of Berlin, Virchow Clinic Campus Central Interdisciplinary Endoscopy Unit Narrow Band versus Conventional Endoscopic.
Colonoscopy; Surveillance Indications
Cancer Incidence and Mortality in Massachusetts, Bureau of Health Statistics, Research and Evaluation Massachusetts Department of Public Health.
FIRST TWO AND HALF YEAR OF NATIONAL SCREENING PROGRAM FOR COLORECTAL CANCERS IN REPUBLIC CROATIA Miroslava Katicic 1, Milan Kujundzic 2, Davor Stimac 3,
Colorectal cancer screening with the addition of flexible sigmoidoscopy to guaiac-based fecal occult blood testing: a population-based controlled trial.
Public State Initiatives in Colorectal Screening: The Colorado Experience Tim Byers MD MPH University of Colorado School of Medicine
Barium Enema in the detection of Colon Cancer
 Subhendu De, Wonsuk Yoo Institute of Public and Preventative Health (IPPH), Georgia Regents University On Summer Public Health Scholars Program (SPHSP)
Perspectives from the Waitemata Bowel Screening Pilot team -The Endoscopic view Paul Frankish Lead Endoscopist.
Colorectal Cancer Screening Colorectal Cancer Screening VT SGNA Conference VT SGNA Conference October 24, 2015 October 24, 2015 Lynn Butterly, MD Lynn.
Colonic cancer screening in high risk groups
Sessile Serrated Adenomas: A Case Presentation Kevin Witt, PGY3 Justin Whitt, MD IU Health Ball Memorial Family Medicine Residency.
Yield of colonoscopy for advanced neoplasia in a population-based setting Bernard DENIS, Jacques PICOT, Jean François VIES, Marjorie MUSSO, Paul François.
Do all colorectal polyps require pathological examination? Aim To assess whether it is possible to omit the pathological examination of some polyps without.
CT Colonography vs Colonoscopy for the Detection of Advanced Neoplasia David H. Kim, M.D., Perry J. Pickhardt, M.D., Andrew J. Taylor, M.D., Winifred K.
High Quality Screening Colonoscopy Colonoscopy is a common endoscopic procedure, with more than 3 million examinations performed in the United States annually.
Colorectal Cancer Screening Implementation of a public health programme An Expert Group on Colorectal Cancer Screening Cancer Society of Finland, Finnish.
New Links to Colorectal Cancer Prevention American Cancer Society Wellmark Foundation.
Quality of Colonoscopy Using an endoscopic database to measure and improve quality AAPCE Memphis- November 5, 2011 David Lieberman MD Chief, Division of.
Interval Colorectal Cancer 전임의 남지혁 Comparison of the Observed Incidence of Colorectal Cancer in the National Polyp Study Cohort with That.
Moving Toward Universal Colon Cancer Screening: Methods In Unsedated Colonoscopy Christopher Forest, PA-C Darenie Goodman, MD Kelly Jones, MD Wm MacMillan.
R4 채정민 / Prof 이창균. INTRODUCTION colonoscopy is a widely used screening tool for colorectal cancer adenoma detection rate (ADR) important quality indicator.
Dynamic patient position changes during colonoscope withdrawal increase adenoma detection : a randomized, crossover trial James E. East, MRCP, MD, Paul.
Quality Improvement in Gastroenterology Aparajita Singh, MD, MPH Assistant Clinical Professor Division of Gastroenterology.
CLinical EValuation of the EndoRings: “The CLEVER study” Interim results of a randomized, multicenter, tandem colonoscopy study Introduction Adenomas can.
Am J Gastroenterol 2012; 107:1213– June 2012 R3. 김동희 /prof. 이창균.
D. M. Kruss MD Colon Cancer How to nip it in the bud! Daniel M. Kruss, M.D. Colon Cancer How to nip it in the bud! Daniel M. Kruss, M.D.
Colonoscopic Polypectomy and Long-Term Prevention of Colorectal- Cancer Deaths N ENG J MED ;8 : Ann G. Zauber, Ph.D, Sidney J. Winawer,
Nurse Endoscopist New Model of Care -Colonoscopy
The capacity challenge:
Clinical process indicators
Quality Indicators for Colonoscopy
Colon Cancer Angela Lavrisiuk
27th Annual Winter CME Conference
Repeat Colonoscopy Recommendations
Increasing Access to Colorectal Cancer Screening in Rural East Texas
A Visual Tour of Effective Colonoscopy
Improving Quality Measures for Colonoscopy and CRC Prevention
Feeling Rushed? Does Late Start Time Predict Poor Quality Colonoscopy?
A Visual Tour of Effective Colonoscopy
Reporting in CRC screening
Effect of a Time-Dependent Colonoscopic Withdrawal Protocol on Adenoma Detection During Screening Colonoscopy  Robert L. Barclay, Joseph J. Vicari, Roger.
Volume 149, Issue 4, Pages (October 2015)
Risks of interval colorectal cancer in a FIT-based screening program
Colonoscopy in crc screening
How to perform water exchange colonoscopy, with tips and tricks
Presentation transcript:

High Quality Screening Colonoscopy Colonoscopy is a common endoscopic procedure, with more than 3 million examinations performed in the United States annually. The efficacy of colonoscopy to prevent colorectal cancer is dependent on the quality of the procedure. National benchmarks have been established as minimal targets to meet or exceed in order to maximize the benefit of the colonoscopy. Three important metrics include the percentage of procedures in which the endoscopist reaches the cecum (Cecal Intubation Rate), the time spent looking at the colon mucosa on withdrawal of the colonoscope (Withdrawal Time), and the percent of screening colonoscopy cases which result in the identification and removal of a precancerous polyp (Adenoma Detection Rate).

98% The cecum is the very beginning of your colon. It contains the appendix and a valve where the small bowel contents leave the small bowel and enter the colon. Physicians who perform colonoscopy will need to reach this area to begin the screening examination. Sometimes, reaching this area can be challenging and time consuming. A physician performing high quality colonoscopy should reach and fully evaluate this area in, at least, 95% of all screening colonoscopies performed. At CSGA we are reaching the cecum in 98% of all screening colonoscopies. This is better than the national standard of care! Cecal Intubation Rate

Cecal Intubation Rates For Screening Colonoscopy

The screening examination process begins after the colonoscope has been passed through the colon and advanced into the cecum (the beginning of the colon). Once the beginning of the colon is reached the physician will slowly withdrawal the colonoscope through the colon while closely inspecting the colon’s folds and lining. A physician performing high quality colonoscopy will spend an average of greater than 6 minutes inspecting the entire colon during screening examinations. The quality of the colonoscopy does not increase as a physician’s cecal withdrawal time increases beyond 9 minutes. Quality of colonoscopy does decrease, however, when a physician’s average cecal withdrawal time is below 6 minutes. At CSGA our average Cecal withdrawal time is 8.3 minutes. This is better than the national standard of care! Cecal Withrawal Time

Mean Withdrawal Time For Screening Colonoscopy

An adenoma is a precancerous polyp. This is a growth in the colon that can, overtime, develop into a colon cancer. This is what physicians are looking to identify and remove during your colonoscopy. The adenoma detection rate is the percentage of the time a physician performing a screening colonoscopy will identify and remove a precancerous polyp. Physicians performing high quality colonoscopy should be finding and removing adenomas in at least 30% of all male screening colonoscopies and 20% of all female screening colonoscopies. As physician’s adenoma rate increases the patient’s risk of developing interval colon cancer or dying from colon cancer decreases. This is to say that as a physician’s adenoma detection rate goes up the patient risk of developing a colon cancer or dying from colon cancer between their first and second screening colonoscopy goes down. At CSGA our adenoma detection rate is 35.8%. This is better than the national standard of care! Adenoma Detection Rate

Adenoma Detection Rate For Screening Colonoscopy