Literature DB >> 26536295

Risk assessment scores for patients with upper gastrointestinal bleeding and their use in clinical practice.

Katy M Waddell1, Adrian J Stanley2.   

Abstract

Upper gastrointestinal bleeding (UGIB) is a common cause for emergency admission to hospital representing a significant clinical as well as economic burden. UGIB encompasses a wide range of severities from life-threatening exsanguination to minor bleeding that may not require hospital admission. Patients with UGIB are often initially assessed and managed by junior doctors and non-gastroenterologists. Several risk scores have been created for the assessment of these patients, some requiring endoscopic data for calculation and others that are calculable from clinical data alone. A key question in clinical practice is how to accurately identify patients with UGIB at high risk of adverse outcome. Patients considered high risk are more likely to experience adverse outcomes and will require urgent intervention. In contrast, those patients with UGIB who are considered to be low risk could potentially be managed on an outpatient basis. The Glasgow Blatchford Score (GBS) appears best at identifying patients at low risk of requiring intervention or death and therefore may be best for use in clinical practice, allowing outpatient management in low risk cases. There has been some debate as to the optimal GBS cut-off score for safely identifying this low-risk group. Many guidelines suggest that patients with a GBS of zero can be safely managed as outpatients, but more recent studies have suggested that this threshold could potentially be safely increased to ≤1. Most other patients require inpatient endoscopy within 24 h and the full Rockall score remains important for risk assessment following endoscopy, particularly as it includes the endoscopic diagnosis. A minority of patients will require emergency endoscopy following resuscitation, but at present there is no evidence that risk scores can accurately identify this very high-risk group. Studies have shown the latest risk assessment score, the AIMS65, looks promising in the prediction of mortality. However, to date there is no data on the use of the AIMS65 in identifying low risk patients for possible outpatient management.

Entities:  

Keywords:  AIMS65 score; Gastrointestinal bleeding; Glasgow Blatchford score; Risk assessment; Rockall score

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26536295     DOI: 10.1080/21548331.2015.1103636

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hosp Pract (1995)        ISSN: 2154-8331


  3 in total

1.  Comparison of Glasgow-Blatchford score and full Rockall score systems to predict clinical outcomes in patients with upper gastrointestinal bleeding.

Authors:  Marjan Mokhtare; Vida Bozorgi; Shahram Agah; Mehdi Nikkhah; Amirhossein Faghihi; Amirhossein Boghratian; Neda Shalbaf; Abbas Khanlari; Hamidreza Seifmanesh
Journal:  Clin Exp Gastroenterol       Date:  2016-10-31

2.  Simple risk factors to predict urgent endoscopy in nonvariceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding pre-endoscopically.

Authors:  Jianzong Wang; Duanming Hu; Wen Tang; Chuanyin Hu; Qin Lu; Juan Li; Jianhong Zhu; Liming Xu; Zhenyu Sui; Mingjie Qian; Shaofeng Wang; Guojian Yin
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2016-06       Impact factor: 1.889

3.  Correlation between the Glasgow-Blatchford score, shock index, and Forrest classification in patients with peptic ulcer bleeding

Authors:  Hong Yang; Chen Pan; Qi Liu; Yan Wang; Zhe Liu; Xian Cao; Jingjing Lei
Journal:  Turk J Med Sci       Date:  2020-06-23       Impact factor: 0.973

  3 in total

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