Title: Upper GI Bleeding
1Upper GI Bleeding
Klaus Gottlieb, MD, FACP, FACG
2A common medical condition
- 250,000 500,000 admissions/year US
- UGI bleeding incidence 100/100,000 adults
- Incidence increases 20-30 fold from third to
ninth decade of life - LGI bleeding incidence 20/100,000 adults
- Overwhelmingly disease of the elderly
- GI bleeding stops spontaneously in 80
3Morbidity Data
- Majority will receive blood transfusions
- 2 10 require urgent surgery to arrest
bleeding - Average LOS 4 7 days
- Mortality rates for UGI bleeding 2 15
- Mortality for patients who develop bleeding after
admission to hospital for another reason is 20
30
4Costs
- Average hospital costs exceed 5,000 per
admission - Most of this for hospital bed and ICU stays
rather than physician fees, blood products,
diagnostic tests, or medications - Reduction of hospital admissions and LOS has
greatest potential to reduce costs
5UGI bleedingNomenclature
- Hematemesis 25
- Melena alone 25 , 50 100 cc of blood will
render stool melenic - Hematochezia 15 , seen in massive UGI hemorrhage
- Red blood hematemesis
- Coffee ground emesis
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8Indications for Hospitalization and Intensive Care
- Traditional Endoscopy on the day of admission or
on the day after - Recent studies Complete endoscopic risk
stratification PRIOR to admission - Between 25- 30 of patients with UGI bleeding
could be discharged from the Emergency Department
9Predictors of Outcome in UGI bleeding
10Ulcer Appearance and Prognosis
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20Scoring System for Predicting Rebleeding and
Mortality
- A simplified scoring system based on endoscopic
and clinical variables has been developed - Rockhall TA et al. Selection of patients for
early discharge or outpatient care after acute
upper gastrointestinal haemorrhage. Lancet
1996347 1138-1140
None or spot in ulcer base
0
Blood in the GI tract, clot, visible vessel
2
in ulcer base
21Scoring is not Boring
22LOS Guidelines for UGI bleeding at UCSF
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24Endoscopic Therapy in UGI bleeding
- Effectively reduces
- Rebleeding
- Need for Surgery
- Mortality (by meta-analysis)
- However, 10 20 percent of patients have
rebleeding after (initially successful)
endoscopic therapy
25The Role of Adjunctive Pharmacological Therapy
- Clot stabilization at a pH of above 6.0 pepsin
is inactivated and cannot lyse clots - Effective clotting may not occur at a pH of 5.9
or lower - Antacids, iced saline gastric lavage and
H2-blockers and other interventions are
ineffective in reducing rebleeding rates
26Proton Pump Inhibitors
- NEJM 1997 high dose oral omeprazole effective in
reducing rebleeding rates. No endoscopic therapy
performed in this study from India - Two multicenter trials from Scandinavia showed
benefit of high dose I.V. omeprazole (1997) - Taiwanese study of 100 patients randomized
between IV omeprazole and cimetidine.
Intragastric pH was around 6.0 for first 24 hours
in omeprazole group but only between 4.5 to 5.5
for cimetidine group. 12 pts in the cimetidine
group and 2 pts in the omeprazole group rebled.
No change in LOS, number of procedures, or
mortality (1998)
27Effect of Intravenous Omeprazole on Recurrent
Bleeding After Endoscopic Treatment of Bleeding
Peptic UlcersLau JYW, Sung JJY, Lee KKC, et
al.N Eng J Med. 2000 343 310-316
- Randomized, controlled, double-blind trial of 250
pts to evaluate whether intravenous infusion of
omeprazole (80 mg bolus, followed by 8 mg/hr) is
more effective than placebo in reducing
rebleeding risk over 30 days following endoscopic
therapy - Well conceived, designed, executed and analyzed
study - Patients included those with an actively bleeding
ulcer or ulcers with a non-bleeding visible
vessel in whom endoscopic therapy was successful
in controlling bleeding - Endoscopic therapy consisted of a combination of
epinephrine injection plus thermocoagulation to
the point of vessel obliteration
28Results
- Rebleeding 6.7 in omeprazole vs. 22.5 in
placebo group (p lt .001, Relative Risk 3.38, 95
C.I. 1.60 7.13) - LOS median 4 days omeprazole, 5 days placebo
(significant) - Transfusions omeprazole mean 1.7, placebo 2.4
(significant) - Mortality 5 omeprazole, 9 placebo (mortality
rate 5.8 ) (not significant) - Surgery 3 omeprazole, 9 placebo (not
significant)
29PROTONIX (Pantoprazole Sodium) Formulations
- 40-mg Delayed-Release Tablet
- 40-mg Lyophilized Powder for Injection
30PROTONIX (Pantoprazole Sodium)Specific Cysteine
Binding Sites
Binds two cysteine residues critical for the
inhibition of gastric acid secretion (Cys 813
and 822)
Modlin IM, Sachs G. Acid Related Diseases,
Biology and Treatment. Schnetztor-Verlag.
1998126-145.
31PPI Pharmacology (Day 1 Data)
Prescribing Information for Aciphex (rabeprazole
sodium), Nexium (esomeprazole magnesium),Prevaci
d (lansoprazole), Prilosec (omeprazole), and
PROTONIX (pantoprazole sodium).
32PROTONIX (Pantoprazole Sodium) 40 mg vs.
Prilosec (omeprazole) 40 mg
Intragastric pH
n 7 normal volunteers
Koop et al. 1994. Prilosec is a registered
trademark of AstraZeneca LP.
33PROTONIX I.V. (Pantoprazole Sodium) for
Injection is indicated for the short-term
treatment (7 to 10 days) of gastroesophageal
reflux disease (GERD), as an alternative for
patients who are unable to continue taking
PROTONIX Delayed-Release Tablets. Safety and
efficacy of PROTONIX I.V. for Injection as an
initial treatment for GERD have not been
demonstrated. The most frequently reported
adverse events with PROTONIX I.V. for Injection
were abdominal pain, chest pain, rash, and
pruritus. PROTONIX is contraindicated in
patients with known hypersensitivity to any
component of the formulation. Treatment with
PROTONIX I.V. for Injection should be
discontinued as soon as the patient is able to be
treated with PROTONIX Delayed-Release
Tablets. Data on safety and effective dosing for
conditions other than GERD (including concomitant
life-threatening upper gastrointestinal bleeds)
are not available. PROTONIX I.V. 40-mg once
daily dosing does not raise gastric pH to levels
sufficient to contribute to the treatment of such
life-threatening conditions. Please see full
Prescribing Information.
34PROTONIX I.V. (Pantoprazole Sodium) for
Injection in Inhibition of Acid Output40 mg I.V.
vs. Placebo
Data on file, Wyeth-Ayerst Laboratories. Study
100-US. Pisegna JR et al. Am J Gastroenterol.
1999942874-2880.
35PROTONIX I.V. (Pantoprazole Sodium) for
InjectionDosage and Administration
- DosageThe recommended dose is one vial (the
equivalent of 40 mg pantoprazole) given once
daily by intravenous infusion for 7 to 10 days.
- AdministrationPROTONIX I.V. for Injection should
be administered intravenously over a period of
approximately 15 minutes at a rate not greater
than 3 mg/min (7 mL/min). PROTONIX I.V. for
Injection should be administered using the
in-line filter provided. The filter must be used
to remove the precipitates that may form when the
reconstituted drug product is mixed with I.V.
solutions
PROTONIX I.V. for Injection Prescribing
Information. Wyeth-Ayerst Laboratories,
Philadelphia, Pa
36Proton Pump Inhibitor Activation in the NPO
Patient
- Acid is always secreted, but at varying levels
- Multiple pathways for stimulation of acid
secretion not involving food including - Basal
- Cephalic
- Canalicular pH is always sufficient to activate
PPIs - Blood contains protein and stimulates gastric
acid secretion when present in the stomach
Modlin IM, Sachs G, Acid Related Diseases,
Biology and Treatment. 1998126-145. Feldman M.
In Feldman M, Scharschmidt BF, Sleisenger MH, et
al. eds. Sleisenger Fordtrans Gastrointestinal
and Liver Disease. 1998587-603.
37PROTONIX I.V. (Pantoprazole Sodium) for
Injection Summary
- Impressive acid suppression
- No evidence of tolerance in a clinical study
(oral 10 days I.V. 7days) - Fast onset (within 15-30 minutes) and long acting
- Generally well tolerated
- No known clinically relevant drug interactions
Data on file, Wyeth-Ayerst Laboratories.