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Nonvariceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding in Portugal: a multicentric retrospective study in twelve Portuguese hospitals.

Abstract

BACKGROUND
Nonvariceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding (NVUGIB) is associated with important mortality. More information is needed in order to improve NVUGIB management. The aims of this study were: (a) characterizing Portuguese patients and clinical approaches used in NVUGIB, (b) comparing management used in Portugal with management globally used in European countries, (c) identify factors associated with management options, and (d) identify factors associated with adverse outcome.
METHODS
ENERGiB was an observational, retrospective cohort study, on NVUGIB with endoscopic evaluation, carried across Europe. This study focuses on Portuguese patients of the ENERGiB study. Patients were managed according to routine care. Later, data were collected from files. Multivariate/univariate analyses were conducted on predictive factors of poor outcome and clinical decisions.
RESULTS
Patients (n=404) were mostly men (66.8%), mean age 68, with co-morbidities (72%), frequently on NSAIDs/aspirin. Most were assisted by general medical (57.8%) or surgical team (20.6%), only 19.4% by gastroenterology/GI-bleeding team. PPI was largely used. Gastric/duodenal ulcers, erosive gastritis and esophagitis were the main bleeding causes. 10% had bleeding persistence/recurrence. Death occurred in 24 patients, 20 from a non-bleeding related cause. Poor outcomes were related with age >65, co-morbidities, fresh blood haematemesis, shock/syncope, bleeding through previous nasogastric tube, massive fluid replacement or transfusions besides erythrocytes.
CONCLUSIONS
This study contributed to characterization of Portuguese patients and NVUGIB episodes in real clinical setting and identified factors associated with a poor outcome. It also identified differences, especially in the organization of GI bleeding teams, which might help us to improve the management of these patients.

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  • Authors

    Fonseca J, Alves CC, Neto R, Arroja B, Vidal R, Macedo G, Nunes AA, Rego A, Carvalho J, Banhudo A, Curado A, Lima PN, Baranda J, Ribeiro F

    Institution

    Gastroenterology Department, Hospital Garcia de Orta, Almada, Portugal. jorgedafonseca@hotmail.com

    Source

    Gastroenterología y hepatología 35:6 pg 377-85

    MeSH

    Aged
    Aged, 80 and over
    Blood Transfusion
    Cohort Studies
    Disease Management
    Endoscopy, Gastrointestinal
    Esophagoscopy
    Female
    Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage
    Hematemesis
    Hemostasis, Endoscopic
    Hemostasis, Surgical
    Hemostatic Techniques
    Humans
    Intubation, Gastrointestinal
    Male
    Melena
    Middle Aged
    Portugal
    Recurrence
    Retrospective Studies
    Sclerotherapy
    Shock, Hemorrhagic
    Treatment Outcome

    Pub Type(s)

    Journal Article
    Multicenter Study

    Language

    eng

    PubMed ID

    22657569