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DOI: 10.1055/a-2663-6372
Capnography monitoring reduces incidence of hypoxia in older patients undergoing gastrointestinal endoscopy under propofol sedation
Gefördert durch: The National Nature Science Foundation of China Nos. 82371193, U21A20357, 81970995
Gefördert durch: The Incubating Program for Clinical Research and Innovation of Renji Hospital RJTJ-JX-002, RJPY-DZX-007, PYII20-09
Gefördert durch: The Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality Funding 21S31900100
Gefördert durch: Shanghai Municipal Education Commission-Gaofeng Clinical Medicine Support 20191903 Clinical Trial: Registration number (trial ID): NCT05030870, Trial registry: ClinicalTrials.gov (http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/), Type of Study: Multicenter, randomized, single-blind, two-arm parallel-group, controlled with an active comparator, interventional superiority clinical trial.

Abstract
Background and study aims
Whether routine capnography monitoring during gastrointestinal endoscopy sedation can reduce occurrence of hypoxia is controversial. Older patients are more prone to hypoxia. This study aimed to determine the effect of additional capnography monitoring on incidence of hypoxia in older patients undergoing gastrointestinal endoscopy under propofol sedation.
Patients and methods
A multicenter, randomized, single-blind, two-arm, parallel-group, controlled with an active comparator, interventional superiority clinical trial was performed at three teaching hospitals in China between September 1, 2021, and September 1, 2022. This study compared additional capnography monitoring (intervention group) and standard monitoring (control group) among older patients (aged 65–79 years) undergoing gastrointestinal endoscopy under propofol sedation. The primary outcome was incidence of hypoxia (75%-89% for < 60s). Secondary outcomes were incidence of subclinical hypoxia (90%-94%), incidence of severe hypoxia (< 75% for any duration or 75%-89% for ≥ 60s), and other adverse events (AEs).
Results
Data from 1777 participants (888 intervention, 889 control group) were analyzed. Additional capnography monitoring reduced incidence of hypoxia in older patients from 19% to 12% (P < 0.001). Incidence of subclinical hypoxia in the additional capnographymonitoring group was 23% and in the standard monitoring group was 15% (P < 0.001). There was no significant difference in incidence of severe hypoxia (P = 0.070) and other AEs between the two groups (P = 0.374).
Conclusions
Additional capnography monitoring during gastrointestinal endoscopy for older patients who were sedated with propofol reduces incidence of hypoxia.
Keywords
Quality and logistical aspects - Sedation and monitoring - Quality management - Performance and complicationsPublikationsverlauf
Eingereicht: 24. Januar 2025
Angenommen nach Revision: 13. Juli 2025
Accepted Manuscript online:
22. Juli 2025
Artikel online veröffentlicht:
07. August 2025
© 2025. The Author(s). This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, permitting unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction so long as the original work is properly cited. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Georg Thieme Verlag KG
Oswald-Hesse-Straße 50, 70469 Stuttgart, Germany
Qiuyue Lian, Jianbo Wu, Jie Zhang, Yizhe Zhang, Xiangyang Cheng, Xiaomei Yang, Renlong Zhou, Yue Chen, Weiwei Ding, Guangzhi Wang, Weifeng Yu, Jiaqiang Zhang, Diansan Su. Capnography monitoring reduces incidence of hypoxia in older patients undergoing gastrointestinal endoscopy under propofol sedation. Endosc Int Open 2025; 13: a26636372.
DOI: 10.1055/a-2663-6372
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