Task force updates ERCP quality metrics

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A task force from the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ASGE) and the American College of Gastroenterology (ACG) released an updated set of quality indicators for endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP), reflecting new evidence and evolving practice since the prior 2015 update. The document, jointly published in Gastrointestinal Endoscopy and The American Journal of Gastroenterology, aims to standardize quality improvement efforts for a procedure that remains highly operator dependent and associated with significant morbidity.
 
Corresponding author Michelle A. Anderson, MD, MSc, a gastroenterologist at Mayo Clinic Arizona in Phoenix, and fellow task force members developed revised indicators spanning the preprocedure, intraprocedure, and postprocedure phases of care. The indicators are designed primarily for individual endoscopist use but may also support unit- or system-wide initiatives. The document outlines 13 ERCP-specific indicators, each paired with a performance target and graded by strength of evidence. A subset was designated as “priority indicators” based on clinical relevance, variability in practice, and feasibility of measurement.
 
"Important changes to this revision of the ERCP quality indicators document include a more restrictive approach to ERCP indications and a clear endorsement of rectal NSAIDs in average-risk patients with intact ampullary sphincters undergoing ERCP. Moreover, because recent data have confirmed the role of prophylactic pancreatic stents in patients at high risk for PEP, we have introduced the tracking of this intervention as a new quality indicator. The area of PEP prevention will continue to evolve with emerging evidence about these and other prophylactic interventions," wrote Dr. Anderson and colleagues.
 
Key preprocedure priorities include ensuring ERCP is performed for an accepted indication (>98%) and that informed consent explicitly addresses ERCP-specific risks. Intraprocedurally, the task force emphasized achieving deep duct cannulation in patients with native papillae (>90%), successful extraction of extrahepatic bile duct stones (>90%), routine documentation of radiation exposure, and near-universal use of rectal indomethacin or diclofenac in patients with an intact papilla to prevent post-ERCP pancreatitis (PEP). Documentation and tracking of prophylactic pancreatic stent use in high-risk cases is also strongly endorsed.
 
Postprocedure indicators focus on outcomes meaningful to patients and health systems, including unplanned hospital visits and unplanned biliary reinterventions within 30 days (each <15%). Recognizing challenges in benchmarking adverse events, the document prioritizes consistent documentation and longitudinal tracking of PEP, bleeding, and cholangitis rather than fixed outcome thresholds.
 
The task force authors described these indicators not as standards of care or credentialing requirements but rather as a framework to drive continuous quality improvement. Early efforts should target the priority indicators most closely linked to patient safety and value.
 
"Each provider and/or center should select the most likely indicators to improve clinical care delivery in their practice. High-quality ERCP requires improvement in all the proposed areas, and we hope that this document will serve as a sequential guide along the quality journey," they concluded.
 
The authors reported having no financial relationships.

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