BMC Gastroenterology (Mar 2012)

Intravenous non-high-dose pantoprazole is equally effective as high-dose pantoprazole in preventing rebleeding among low risk patients with a bleeding peptic ulcer after initial endoscopic hemostasis

  • Liang Chih-Ming,
  • Lee Jyong-Hong,
  • Kuo Yuan-Hung,
  • Wu Keng-Liang,
  • Chiu Yi-Chun,
  • Chou Yeh-Pin,
  • Hu Ming-Luen,
  • Tai Wei-Chen,
  • Chiu King-Wah,
  • Hu Tsung-Hui,
  • Chuah Seng-Kee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-230X-12-28
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 28

Abstract

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Abstract Background Many studies have shown that high-dose proton-pumps inhibitors (PPI) do not further reduce the rate of rebleeding compared to non-high-dose PPIs but we do not know whether intravenous non-high-dose PPIs reduce rebleeding rates among patients at low risk (Rockall score Methods Subjects who received high dose and non-high-dose pantoprazole for confirmed acute PU bleeding at a tertiary referral hospital were enrolled (n = 413). They were divided into sustained hemostasis (n = 324) and rebleeding groups (n = 89). The greedy method was applied to allow treatment-control random matching (1:1). Patients were randomly selected from the non-high-dose and high-dose PPI groups who had a high risk peptic ulcer bleeding (n = 104 in each group), and these were then subdivided to two subgroups (Rockall score ≥ 6 vs. vs. 27). Results An initial low hemoglobin level, serum creatinine level, and Rockall score were independent factors associated with rebleeding. After case-control matching, the significant variables between the non-high-dose and high-dose PPI groups for a Rockall score ≥ 6 were the rebleeding rate, and the amount of blood transfused. Case-controlled matching for the subgroup with a Rockall score Conclusion Intravenous non-high-dose pantoprazole is equally effective as high-dose pantoprazole when treating low risk patients with a Rockall sore were

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