J. Rizzo et al., A performance, safety and cost comparison of reusable and disposable endoscopic biopsy forceps: a prospective, randomized trial, GASTROIN EN, 51(3), 2000, pp. 257-261
Background: Many gastroenterologists believe that disposable forceps are mo
re expensive than reusable forceps. It has been shown, however, that cross
contamination and spread of infection are possible with reusable forceps. W
e conducted a prospective, randomized study to evaluate the performance, sa
fety and cost of reusable versus disposable biopsy forceps.
Methods: Endoscopists were randomly assigned reusable or disposable biopsy
forceps during upper and lower endoscopy Forceps were evaluated for ease of
passage through the endoscope, ease of opening and closing, adequacy of sa
mple, and overall evaluation following the endoscopy using an ordinal scale
. The cost per biopsy session was calculated using the following formula: (
Acquisition cost + Reprocessing costs)/Number of biopsy sessions.
Results: Disposable forceps received a predominantly excellent rating versu
s a predominantly good rating for reusable forceps. Disposable forceps were
also found to be more cast-effective than reusable forceps with an average
savings of $5.94 per biopsy session. Examination of reusable forceps revea
led residual patient debris despite "adequate" cleansing.
Conclusions: Disposable forceps outperformed reusable forceps and were foun
d to be more cost-effective. Residual patient debris on reusable forceps ma
y pose a risk of cross contamination and the spread of infection.