Here’s a link from ACG twitter feed: AJG Video of the Month (37 second video link)
Related blog posts:
Here’s a link from ACG twitter feed: AJG Video of the Month (37 second video link)
Related blog posts:
A recent systemic review and meta-analysis (JAMA Intern Med. doi10.10001/jamainternmed.2014.4056) calls into question the practive of using continous intravenous proton pump inhibitor (PPI) for high-risk bleeding ulcers.
“Current guidelines recommend an intravenous bolus dose of a proton pump inhibitor (PPI) followed by continuous PPI infusion after endoscopic therapy in patients wtih high-risk bleeding ulcers. Substitution of intermittent PPI therapy, if similarly effective as bolus plus continous-infusion PPI therapy, would decrease the PPI dose, costs, and resource use.”
Ultimately, only randomized 13 studies (Table 1) were identified that examined only high-risk ulcers, and used appropriate treatment protocols. Table 2 lists the results with regard to recurrent bleeding, mortality, surgery, blood transfusions, and length of hospital stay as well as the number of patients; 1691 patients had data for rebleeding within 30 days. Typically, intermittent PPI dosage was 40-80 mg BID.
Key findings:
Bottomline: this systemic review indicates that intermittent PPI therapy may be similarly effective as continuous drip PPI for meaningful outcomes in high-risk bleeding ulcers.
Related blog post: