Abstract

Constipation is an independent risk factor for poor bowel preparation. This study aimed to evaluate the bowel-cleansing efficacy and safety of polyethylene glycol (PEG) combined with linaclotide (lin) for colonoscopy in patients with chronic constipation. This single-blinded, randomized, controlled and multicenter study was conducted from July 2021 to December 2022 at seven hospitals. Patients with chronic constipation who underwent colonoscopies were enrolled and randomly assigned to 4 groups with split -PEG regimens: 4L-PEG group, 4L-PEG+1d-Lin group, 3L-PEG+1d-Lin group, and 3L-PEG+3d-Lin group. The primary outcome was rates of adequate bowel preparation, defined as a total BBPS score ≥6 and a score ≥2 for each segment. Secondary outcomes were adverse effects, sleep quality, willingness to repeat the colonoscopy, adenoma detection rate, and polyp detection rate. 502 patients were enrolled. The rates of adequate bowel preparation (80.0% vs. 60.3%, P<0.001; 84.4% vs. 60.3%, P<0.001) and the total BBPS scores (6.90±1.28 vs. 6.00±1.61, P<0.001; 7.03±1.24 vs. 6.00±1.61, P<0.01) in 4L-PEG+1d-Lin group and 3L-PEG+3d-Lin group were superior to that in 4L-PEG group. Compared with 4L-PEG group, 4L-PEG+1d-Lin group (66.7% vs. 81.7%, P=0.008) and 3L-PEG+3d-Lin group (75.0% vs. 81.7%, P=0.224) had a lower percentage of mild adverse events. No statistically significant difference in willingness to repeat the colonoscopy, sleep quality, polyp detection rate, or adenoma detection rate was observed among groups. PEG combined with linaclotide might be an effective method for bowel preparation before colonoscopy in patients with chronic constipation.

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