BBPS — Boston Bowel Preparation Scale
Score each segment 0–3: 0=unprepared (solid stool), 1=poor (partial view), 2=fair (minor residual), 3=good (excellent view)
Usus besar kanan (sekum dan kolon asendens)
Kolon transversal (dari fleksura hepatik ke splenikus)
Kolon kiri (desenden, sigmoid, rektum)
Panduan lengkap segera hadir
Kami sedang menyiapkan panduan edukasi lengkap untuk Colonoscopy Bowel Prep Quality (BBPS). Kembali lagi segera untuk penjelasan langkah demi langkah, rumus, contoh nyata, dan tips ahli.
Colonoscopy bowel preparation quality scoring provides a standardised, objective measure of how well the colon has been cleansed prior to or during colonoscopy, enabling endoscopists to determine whether the examination is adequate, reliable, and safe. Inadequate bowel preparation — leaving faecal residue that obscures mucosal visualisation — affects approximately 20–25% of all colonoscopy procedures and is the leading cause of missed polyps, aborted procedures, and premature recall colonoscopies. The Boston Bowel Preparation Scale (BBPS), developed by Lai and colleagues and validated in 2009, is the most widely used and validated preparation quality scoring system in clinical practice. The BBPS scores three colonic segments independently — the right colon (caecum and ascending colon), transverse colon (including hepatic and splenic flexures), and left colon (descending colon, sigmoid colon, and rectum) — each on a scale of 0–3: 0 = unprepared colon segment with mucosa not seen due to solid stool; 1 = portion of mucosa not seen due to staining, residual stool, or opaque liquid; 2 = minor amount of residual staining, small fragments of stool, or opaque liquid, but mucosa of colon segment seen well; 3 = entire mucosa of colon segment seen well with no residual staining, small fragments, or opaque liquid. Total BBPS score ranges from 0 to 9; a total score ≤5 or any individual segment score of 0–1 indicates inadequate preparation requiring repeat colonoscopy within 1 year. A score ≥6 (with no individual segment <2) indicates adequate preparation. Split-dose polyethylene glycol (PEG) preparation — where half the preparation volume is taken the evening before and the second half on the morning of the procedure — consistently achieves superior BBPS scores compared to same-day or full-evening-before preparation.
BBPS Total Score = Right colon score (0–3) + Transverse colon score (0–3) + Left colon score (0–3); Total range 0–9; Adequate preparation: total ≥6 AND no segment <2; Inadequate preparation: total ≤5 OR any segment score 0–1 → repeat colonoscopy within 12 months; Excellent preparation: total 8–9; Each segment: 0=unprepared; 1=portions obscured; 2=well seen with minor residue; 3=excellent visibility, no residue
- 1Assess the right colon (caecum and ascending colon) segment score during withdrawal of the colonoscope after reaching the caecum: inspect the mucosa systematically and assign a score 0–3 based on the amount of residual stool, fluid, or staining that obscures mucosal visualisation — score should be assigned AFTER suctioning of liquid stool but before water flushing to remove residue.
- 2Assess the transverse colon segment (including both hepatic and splenic flexures) during withdrawal: apply the same 0–3 criteria; note that the transverse colon often accumulates more liquid content from the proximal colon and may score lower than the right colon if preparation is inconsistent.
- 3Assess the left colon (descending colon, sigmoid, and rectum) segment during withdrawal: the left colon is typically the most consistently prepared segment because it receives the preparation fluid last and is closest to the anus; a low left colon score often indicates that the preparation was given too early the previous day rather than a split-dose approach.
- 4Sum the three segment scores to obtain the total BBPS score (0–9); document each segment score and total score in the endoscopy report as a standard quality metric.
- 5Interpret the total BBPS score: total ≤5 or any single segment score of 0 or 1 = inadequate preparation; repeat colonoscopy should be recommended within 12 months (not 10 years as standard interval) and the reason for inadequacy and repeat interval must be clearly stated in the procedure report.
- 6For inadequate preparations, document contributing factors in the report: patient compliance with preparation instructions, preparation timing, patient weight and opioid use (which slow bowel transit), history of constipation, and prior bariatric surgery — these factors guide more intensive preparation protocols for the repeat procedure.
- 7If a segmental BBPS score is 0 (solid stool blocking view), perform targeted irrigation with water and suction where possible; document whether additional water irrigation was required during the procedure, and whether any segments were unable to be adequately visualised after irrigation attempts.
A score of 8–9 indicates excellent bowel preparation with reliable polyp detection across all segments.
All segments scored ≥2 and the total is 8; this preparation quality provides high confidence that the colonoscopy is diagnostically complete and missed polyp risk is minimised.
A single segment score of ≤1 renders the preparation inadequate regardless of total score — polyps in that segment cannot be excluded.
Even with a total of 6, the right colon segment of 1 means the right side of the colon was not adequately visualised — a clinically significant region for advanced serrated polyps and synchronous adenomas.
A right colon score of 0 indicates solid stool that could not be cleared — this is the most common location for missed significant pathology.
With scores of 0–1 in the right and transverse colon, the endoscopist cannot exclude significant polyps or early cancers; the procedure must be repeated with the most effective preparation protocol available.
BBPS 6 with all segments = 2 is technically adequate but represents borderline cleansing; documenting this finding encourages improved preparation for the next procedure.
A BBPS of 6 (each segment 2/3) is the minimum for adequate colonoscopy; guidelines require that the standard post-polypectomy or screening intervals be applied without modification, but endoscopist comments about preparation quality help optimise future procedures.
Gastroenterology units use BBPS documentation in all colonoscopy reports as a mandatory quality indicator, with BBPS data extracted for service-level audit and improvement cycles, enabling practitioners to make well-informed quantitative decisions based on validated computational methods and industry-standard approaches
Endoscopy pre-assessment nurses use BBPS risk factors (constipation, opioid use) to identify patients requiring intensified preparation protocols before colonoscopy is booked, helping analysts produce accurate results that support strategic planning, resource allocation, and performance benchmarking across organizations
NHS Bowel Cancer Screening Programme coordinators use colonoscopy preparation quality data from BCSP databases to monitor preparation adequacy rates nationally and identify outlying units, allowing professionals to quantify outcomes systematically and compare scenarios using reliable mathematical frameworks and established formulas
Clinical researchers use BBPS as the primary outcome in randomised trials of bowel preparation agents and protocols, providing a standardised, validated endpoint for comparison, supporting data-driven evaluation processes where numerical precision is essential for compliance, reporting, and optimization objectives
Patients referred for colonoscopy receive written preparation instructions that explicitly include split-dose timing and diet restrictions, with the BBPS threshold (score ≥6) communicated as the goal for their preparation to be adequate.
Patients with severe constipation or opioid-induced bowel dysfunction
Patients taking regular opioids or those with chronic severe constipation (Bristol Stool Scale type 1–2 baseline) are at very high risk of inadequate preparation. Interventions: start a low-residue diet 3–5 days before; switch to high-volume PEG 4L; consider adding bisacodyl the night before preparation; arrange same-day preparation for afternoon procedures. If outpatient preparation repeatedly fails, inpatient admission for nasogastric administration of preparation fluid should be considered before planning repeat colonoscopy.
Post-bariatric surgery colonoscopy
Patients with prior Roux-en-Y gastric bypass or sleeve gastrectomy have altered bowel anatomy and transit. Preparation clearance may be faster than expected; some patients require lower volumes but may also have issues with compliance due to nausea. Evidence is limited — most centres use the same preparation protocols as standard patients with closer monitoring. CT colonography is a reasonable alternative when colonoscopy preparation is consistently problematic.
Flexible sigmoidoscopy preparation
Flexible sigmoidoscopy (FS) examines only the left colon (typically to the splenic flexure). Preparation for FS is significantly simpler: phosphate enema 45 minutes before the procedure is the standard. The BBPS is typically not formally scored in FS as only the left colon segment is examined; adequate left colon preparation is assessed clinically. FS is used in bowel cancer screening programmes where full colonoscopy preparation is a barrier.
CT colonography preparation
CT colonography (CTC, virtual colonoscopy) requires colonic distension with CO₂ and bowel preparation for adequate mucosal visualisation. Standard CTC uses either full laxative preparation (similar to optical colonoscopy) or reduced laxative preparation with faecal tagging (oral contrast that tags residual stool, allowing computer subtraction of tagged material). Faecal tagging regimens improve patient acceptance significantly and have equivalent polyp detection rates.
| BBPS Score | Segment Interpretation | Total Interpretation | Recommended Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 per segment | Excellent — entire mucosa seen, no residue | Total 9 = Excellent | Standard interval applies; proceed normally |
| 2 per segment | Good — well visualised, minor residue only | Total 6+ (all ≥2) = Adequate | Standard interval applies |
| 1 per segment | Partial visualisation — portions obscured | Any segment 1 = Inadequate regardless of total | Repeat colonoscopy within 12 months; improve prep protocol |
| 0 per segment | Unprepared — mucosa not seen | Any segment 0 = Very inadequate | Repeat within 3–6 months; consider inpatient lavage or CT colonography |
What bowel preparation agents are most effective for colonoscopy?
Polyethylene glycol (PEG) solutions are the most commonly used and rigorously evaluated preparations. PEG 4L (full volume) achieves excellent cleansing but is poorly tolerated due to volume. Low-volume alternatives include PEG 2L with ascorbic acid (Moviprep) and sodium picosulfate/magnesium citrate (Picolax) — both show non-inferiority to full-volume PEG with better tolerability. Sodium phosphate preparations have largely been discontinued due to renal toxicity risk in elderly and dehydrated patients.
Why is split-dose preparation superior to day-before preparation?
Multiple RCTs have demonstrated that split-dose PEG preparation (half the evening before, half the morning of the procedure) achieves significantly higher BBPS scores and higher adenoma detection rates compared to same-day or evening-only preparation. The advantage is primarily in the right colon, where preparation given the prior evening may have drained through and left residue by the following morning. Meta-analyses show split-dose increases BBPS scores by approximately 1 point.
What is the BBPS threshold for adequate bowel preparation?
A total BBPS ≥6 with no individual segment score ≤1 defines adequate preparation, based on the original validation study by Lai et al. (2009) which identified this threshold as providing acceptable polyp detection rates. Some expert groups suggest a higher threshold of total ≥7 with each segment ≥2 for optimal detection of sessile serrated lesions, which are particularly susceptible to being missed with lower preparation quality.
How long should the colonoscopy repeat interval be after inadequate preparation?
After an inadequate preparation (BBPS ≤5 or any segment ≤1), repeat colonoscopy should be performed within 12 months — not 10 years. This is because the clinical reliability of a negative examination cannot be established when segments were not adequately visualised. The reason for inadequacy and the recommended repeat interval must be explicitly stated in the endoscopy report to guide the referring clinician.
Does low-BBPS preparation affect adenoma detection rate (ADR)?
Yes. Studies show that BBPS scores significantly predict adenoma detection rate. Each 1-point improvement in BBPS is associated with approximately 10–15% improvement in ADR. This is particularly significant in the right colon, where sessile serrated lesions (flat, mucus-covered polyps) are easiest to miss with inadequate preparation. ADR is itself the most important quality indicator for colonoscopy and directly inversely correlated with post-colonoscopy colorectal cancer rates.
What factors predict poor bowel preparation quality?
Independent predictors of inadequate preparation include: opioid use (slows transit), prior colorectal surgery, constipation (history or current), diabetes mellitus (gastroparesis, constipation), tricyclic antidepressants, male sex, high BMI, inflammatory bowel disease with structuring, late afternoon/evening procedure start time (when preparation was taken earlier), non-adherence to low-residue diet the day before, and non-split-dose preparation timing.
Can same-day preparation be used instead of split-dose?
Same-day preparation (all preparation taken the morning of the procedure) is an option for afternoon procedures and may be preferred by some patients. Evidence shows it produces comparable right colon cleansing to split-dose for afternoon procedures and is less disruptive to sleep. Same-day preparation is recommended to end at least 2 hours before the procedure. It is less suitable for morning-start procedures where the preparation volume would need to be taken very early.
What modifications should be made for patients with known difficult preparation (constipation, opioid use)?
For high-risk patients, consider: switching from sodium picosulfate to high-volume PEG 4L (more reliable in motility disorders); adding a stimulant laxative the evening before preparation; low-residue diet for 3–5 days rather than 1 day pre-procedure; consider same-day preparation with morning start; referral for inpatient preparation if outpatient has repeatedly failed; and consider CT colonography as an alternative to colonoscopy in those where preparation consistently fails.
Tip Pro
When completing the procedure report after a colonoscopy with an inadequate BBPS score, include specific actionable advice for the next preparation: 'Recommend split-dose PEG 4L preparation; low-residue diet for 3 days preceding; stop opioids if clinically possible; morning start procedure preferred.' Concrete preparation improvement instructions in the report significantly increase the likelihood of adequate preparation at the next colonoscopy.
Tahukah Anda?
The first fibreoptic colonoscopy was performed in 1969 by Hiromi Shinya and William Wolff, who also removed the first polyp endoscopically — an innovation that launched the era of polypectomy and colonoscopic prevention of colorectal cancer. Before this, bowel tumours could only be detected on barium enema X-ray and removed surgically. Today, colonoscopy with polypectomy prevents more than 50,000 colorectal cancer deaths annually in the United States alone.
Referensi
- ›Lai EJ et al. — The Boston Bowel Preparation Scale: Validation and clinical correlates (Gastrointest Endosc 2009)
- ›ESGE Guideline — Bowel preparation for colonoscopy (Pohl H et al., Endoscopy 2019)
- ›ACG Clinical Guideline — Bowel Preparation for Colonoscopy (Johnson DA et al., Am J Gastroenterol 2014)
- ›NICE DG21 — Colon capsule endoscopy for surveillance of polyps in people with colon adenomas and incomplete bowel preparation (2021)
- ›UK Joint Advisory Group on GI Endoscopy (JAG) — Standards for the Design and Delivery of Bowel Preparation for Colonoscopy