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Published in: Indian Journal of Gastroenterology 2/2019

01-04-2019 | Endoscopy | Original Article

Comparison of various prognostic scores in variceal and non-variceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding: A prospective cohort study

Authors: Gyanranjan Rout, Sanchit Sharma, Deepak Gunjan, Saurabh Kedia, Baibaswata Nayak, Shalimar

Published in: Indian Journal of Gastroenterology | Issue 2/2019

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Abstract

Background and Aims

Various prognostic scores like Glasgow–Blatchford bleeding score (GBS), modified Glasgow–Blatchford bleeding score (mGBS), full Rockall score (FRS) including endoscopic findings, clinical Rockall score (CRS), and albumin, international normalized ratio (INR), mental status, systolic blood pressure, age >65 (AIMS65) are used for risk stratification in patients with upper gastrointestinal bleeding (UGIB). The utility of these scores in variceal UGIB (VUGIB) is not well defined. In this prospective study, we aimed to assess the performance of these scores in patients with non-variceal (NVUGIB) and VUGIB.

Methods

We included 1011 patients (during March 2017 and August 2018) including 439 with NVUGIB and 572 VUGIB. Performance of GBS, mGBS, FRS, CRS, and AIMS65 for various outcome measures was analyzed using the area under receiver operator characteristic curve (AUROC).

Results

The accuracy of prognostic scores in predicting the composite outcome including the need of hospital-based intervention and 42-day mortality was higher in NVUGIB as compared with VUGIB, AUROC: CRS: 0.641 vs. 0.537; FRS: 0.669 vs. 0.625; GBS: 0.719 vs. 0.587; mGBS: 0.711 vs. 0.594; AIMS65: 0.567 vs. 0.548. GBS and mGBS at a cut-off score of 1 had the highest negative predictive value, 91.7% and 91.3%, respectively, for predicting composite outcome in NVUGIB. Similarly, these scores had better accuracy for predicting 42-day rebleeding in NVUGIB as compared to VUGIB, AUROC: CRS: 0.680 vs. 0.537; FRS: 0.698 vs. 0.565; GBS: 0.661 vs. 0.543; mGBS: 0.627 vs. 0.540; AIMS65: 0.695 vs. 0.606.

Conclusion

The prognostic scores such as CRS, FRS, GBS, mGBS, and AIMS65 predict the need for hospital-based management, rebleeding, and mortality better among patients with NVUGIB than VUGIB.
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Metadata
Title
Comparison of various prognostic scores in variceal and non-variceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding: A prospective cohort study
Authors
Gyanranjan Rout
Sanchit Sharma
Deepak Gunjan
Saurabh Kedia
Baibaswata Nayak
Shalimar
Publication date
01-04-2019
Publisher
Springer India
Published in
Indian Journal of Gastroenterology / Issue 2/2019
Print ISSN: 0254-8860
Electronic ISSN: 0975-0711
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12664-018-0928-8

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