Variations in the reporting of endoscopies by different endoscopists

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Abstract

All gastroscopies and colonoscopies performed in two UK teaching hospitals over a period of one year were audited to investigate whether endoscopic reporting of gastroscopies and colonoscopies by different endoscopists is consistent. Endoscopic diagnoses were retrieved from the hospitals' endoscopy databases. The results of 1,814 colonoscopies and 2,127 gastroscopies were analysed using χ2 (Chi squared). The frequency of reporting common diagnoses was variable and the differences between specialist endoscopists were highly significant, including for important conditions such as peptic ulceration (range 2-10%, p=0.001) and colonic polyps (16-45%, p<0.0001). There is a large variation in the frequency of the diagnoses reported by different endoscopists. This is unlikely to be explained by casemix or chance. This may have major implications for the health of patients. More emphasis must be placed during training on the correct interpretation of endoscopies.

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Spencer, H. L., Lobo, A. J., & Riley, S. A. (2007). Variations in the reporting of endoscopies by different endoscopists. Clinical Medicine, Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of London, 7(1), 23–27. https://doi.org/10.7861/clinmedicine.7-1-23

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