Variceal Bleeding FFH Med-2
Variceal Bleeding FFH Med-2
Variceal Bleeding FFH Med-2
Varicose veins that develop in the esophagous as a result of elevated pressure in the venous system of the abdomen.
Overall mortality of first bleed is 50% mainly due to patients dying before they reach hospital.
50-70% patients experience a re-bleeding episode during hospitalisation. At least, a third will re-bleed within 6 weeks of discharge from hospital. No more than third will survive beyond one year.
Esophageal Varices
Esophageal Varices
Varices in the distal esophagus as viewed through an endoscope
1st Degree Varices 2nd Degree Varices 3rd Degree Varices Predictors of Bleeding in EV - Size - Red Spots - Child Pugh Score
MINOR BLEEDING
(BP Stable, Pulse < 100/min)
MAJOR BLEEDING
Hypotensive Shock, Patient Collapse
History of past bleeding attacks, jaundice/NSAIDs, other medications Inject Octreotide 50 mcg* i.v. stat at the site of visit
Inject Octreotide 50 mcg stat i.v. AND START I.V. infusion of Sandostatin 25 mcg/hour HOW? (Add 3 ampoules of 100 mcg Sandostatin in 500 c.c. dextrose/water 5% in 12 hours) URGENTLY SHIFT PATIENT TO HOSPITAL
* Sandostatin (Octreotide) is available as (a) 0.05 mg injection (50 mcg ampoule) (b) 0.1 mg injection (100 mcg ampoules)
Prevention - Beta blockers and nitrates Acute variceal bleeding - Vasopressin - Vasopressin Analogue - Somatostatin - Somatostatin Analogue
Same mode of action as vasopressin Longer half life Fewer side effects LIMITATIONS - Less effective in controlling active bleeding and preventing re-bleeding - No reduction in transfusion requirements - Should be use with trans-dermal Nitroglycerine to counter cardiac side effects
(Hepatology 1993, vol.18, p 61-65)
Contrindicated in IHD
(Management of Portal Hypertension and Budd Chiari Syndrome, Andrew K Burroughs)
ECG and BP must be monitored Can only be used when ICU facilities are available
(Terlipressin package insert)
Acts by selectively reducing hepatic blood flow and wedge hepatic venous pressure
Same pharmacologic effects as Somatostatin Much longer half life Significantly reduces intra-variceal pressure Decreases the inflow of blood to the portal system Increased selectivity Potency greater than that of Somatostatin
More potent
More selective
A recent meta-analysis evaluated 13 randomized trials of octreotide v/s several alternative interventions for variceal hemorrhage[21] These 13 trials included a total of 1077 patients (numbers ranged from 40 to 199 total patients per trial). The endpoints analyzed involved assessments made at the end of the recorded follow-up, rather than at arbitrary times during the first few hours of hospitalization. The primary endpoints were:
This study defined lack of control of bleeding as any episode of rebleeding during the follow-up period It defined major complications as hypertension or hypotension, cardiac or intestinal ischemia, arrhythmias, pneumonia, pulmonary edema, or any side effect that required termination of treatment
Corley DA, Cello JP, Adkisson W, et al. Octreotide for acute esophageal variceal bleeding: a meta-analysis. Gastroenterology. 2001;120:946-954.
Meta-analysis demonstrated that most studies favor octreotide vs alternative therapy (vasopressin/terlipressin, placebo/no therapy, and sclerotherapy) for the control of bleeding in acute variceal hemorrhage
100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0
Major Any
Oc tre
Va Sc Pl ac so le ro eb /T ot /B o er id an li e d
Ba llo on
Octreotide was associated with fewer Major Complication than vasopressin/ Terlipressin A trend towards Morality benefit especially against Balloon or Vasopressin Comparable in efficacy to Emergency Sclerotherapy and comparable or better than other modalities. Most common dosage regime in studies was 25 50 g IV for 48- 120 hours Addition of Octreotide to Sclerotherapy produced significant better initial bleeding control and Rebleeding rates and small survival advantage compared with vasopressin/Terlipressin
(Gastroenterology 2001, 120, p 946-954)
Emergency therapy required at Family Physicians Clinic for a patient with projectile bloody vomiting reports
Based on the number of studies showing a clinical benefit for octreotide in the control of acute bleeds Octreotide infusion is included in the current American College of Gastroenterology guidelines for variceal bleeding in patients with cirrhosis
Conclusion
At present, available clinical evidence suggests that, because of its efficacy & lack of major side effects Sandostatin most closely