Literature DB >> 26866524

Management of gastric varices: a French national survey.

Delphine Weil1, Jean-Paul Cervoni, Nadim Fares, Marika Rudler, Christophe Bureau, Aurélie Plessier, Thong Dao, Arnaud Pauwels, Dominique Thabut, Paul Castellani, Frederic Oberti, Nicolas Carbonell, Laure Elkrief, Vincent Di Martino, Thierry Thevenot.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Bleeding from gastric varices is more severe than that from esophageal varices, but its management remains debated. We aimed to determine how French hepatogastroenterologists manage cirrhotic patients with gastric varices.
METHODS: Hepatogastroenterologists (n=1163) working in general or university hospitals received a self-administered questionnaire.
RESULTS: Overall, 155 hepatogastroenterologists (13.3%) from 112 centers (33.3%; 39/40 university hospitals, 73/296 general hospitals) answered. Primary prophylaxis was used by 98.1% of hepatogastroenterologists as follows: β-blockers 96.1% (93.8 vs. 97.0%; university vs. general hospitals respectively; P=0.57), glue obliteration 16.9% (17.2 vs. 16.3%; P=0.88), and transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) 8.0% (12.7 vs. 4.6%; P=0.12). To manage bleeding, university hospitals had greater local access to glue obliteration (95.4 vs. 68.2%; P<0.001) and TIPS (78.5 vs. 3.5%; P<0.001). Early TIPS was proposed by 53.6% (72.1 vs. 39.2%; P<0.001). Glue obliteration was performed under general anesthesia (86.1%) using Glubran (43.1%) or Histoacryl (52.9%), and lipiodol (78.8%) with varying degrees of dilution (1 : 10 to 3 : 4). The injected volume per varix varied widely (1-20 ml). Glue obliteration, band ligation, or both were used by, respectively, 64.2, 18.2, and 17.5% of practitioners. Almost all hepatogastroenterologists (98%) performed secondary prophylaxis: β-blockers 74.7% (75.0 vs. 74.4%, university vs. general hospitals; P=0.93), glue obliteration 66.0% (76.9 vs. 57.6%; P=0.013), and TIPS 30.0% (39.1 vs. 23.3%; P=0.037).
CONCLUSION: The management of gastric varices in France is heterogeneous across centers. University hospitals have better access to techniques such as glue obliteration and TIPS. As bleeding from gastric varices has a poor outcome, guidelines should be established to standardize clinical practices and design further studies.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 26866524     DOI: 10.1097/MEG.0000000000000560

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Gastroenterol Hepatol        ISSN: 0954-691X            Impact factor:   2.566


  2 in total

1.  Exploratory models comparing ethiodized oil-glue and gold fiducials for bladder radiotherapy image-guidance.

Authors:  Daryl Lim Joon; Alexandra Berlangieri; Benjamin Harris; Mark Tacey; Rachel O'Meara; Brent Pitt; Angela Viotto; Kerryn Brown; Michal Schneider; Nathan Lawrentschuk; Shomik Sengupta; Colleen Berry; Trish Jenkins; Michael Chao; Morikatsu Wada; Farshad Foroudi; Vincent Khoo
Journal:  Phys Imaging Radiat Oncol       Date:  2021-02-06

2.  The combination of balloon-assisted antegrade transvenous obliteration and transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt for the management of cardiofundal varices hemorrhage.

Authors:  Jiacheng Liu; Chongtu Yang; Songjiang Huang; Chen Zhou; Qin Shi; Kun Qian; Songlin Song; Bin Xiong
Journal:  Eur J Gastroenterol Hepatol       Date:  2020-05       Impact factor: 2.586

  2 in total

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