The Korean Journal of Internal Medicine (Nov 2022)

Clinical outcomes of acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding according to the risk indicated by Glasgow-Blatchford risk score-computed tomography score in the emergency room

  • Hyun Ae Lee,
  • Hye-Kyung Jung,
  • Tae Oh Kim,
  • Ju-Ran Byeon,
  • Eui-Sun Jeong,
  • Hyun-Ji Cho,
  • Chung Hyun Tae,
  • Chang Mo Moon,
  • Seong-Eun Kim,
  • Ki-Nam Shim,
  • Sung-Ae Jung

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3904/kjim.2022.099
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 37, no. 6
pp. 1176 – 1185

Abstract

Read online

Background/Aims Acute upper gastrointestinal (UGI) bleeding is a significant emergency situation with a mortality rate of 2% to 10%. Therefore, initial risk stratification is important for proper management. We aimed to evaluate the role of contrast-enhanced multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) for risk stratification in patients with acute UGI bleeding in the emergency room (ER). Methods This retrospective study included patients with UGI bleeding in the ER. Glasgow-Blatchford risk score-computed tomography (GBS-CT) was assessed using a combination of GBS and the MDCT scan scoring system. Results Of the 297 patients with UGI bleeding, 124 (41.8%) underwent abdominal MDCT. Among them, 90.3% were classified as high-risk by GBS, and five patients died (4.0%). Rebleeding occurred in nine patients (7.3%). The high-risk GBS-CT group had significantly higher in-hospital mortality (10.5% in high-risk vs. 1.4% in moderate risk vs. 0% in low-risk, p = 0.049), transfusion amount (p < 0.001), and endoscopic hemostasis (p < 0.001) compared to the moderate- and low-risk groups. Conclusions Adding MDCT scans to the existing validated prognosis model when predicting the risk of UGI bleeding in patients in the ER plays a significant role in determining in-hospital mortality, transfusions, and the need for endoscopic hemostasis.

Keywords