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Comparison of risk scoring systems for patients presenting with upper gastrointestinal bleeding: international multicentre prospective study

Objective To compare the predictive accuracy and clinical utility of five risk scoring systems in the assessment of patients with upper gastrointestinal bleeding. Design International multicentre prospective study. Setting Six large hospitals in Europe, North America, Asia, and Oceania. Participants...

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Autores principales: Stanley, Adrian J, Laine, Loren, Dalton, Harry R, Ngu, Jing H, Schultz, Michael, Abazi, Roseta, Zakko, Liam, Thornton, Susan, Wilkinson, Kelly, Khor, Cristopher J L, Murray, Iain A, Laursen, Stig B
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5217768/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28053181
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.i6432
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author Stanley, Adrian J
Laine, Loren
Dalton, Harry R
Ngu, Jing H
Schultz, Michael
Abazi, Roseta
Zakko, Liam
Thornton, Susan
Wilkinson, Kelly
Khor, Cristopher J L
Murray, Iain A
Laursen, Stig B
author_facet Stanley, Adrian J
Laine, Loren
Dalton, Harry R
Ngu, Jing H
Schultz, Michael
Abazi, Roseta
Zakko, Liam
Thornton, Susan
Wilkinson, Kelly
Khor, Cristopher J L
Murray, Iain A
Laursen, Stig B
author_sort Stanley, Adrian J
collection PubMed
description Objective To compare the predictive accuracy and clinical utility of five risk scoring systems in the assessment of patients with upper gastrointestinal bleeding. Design International multicentre prospective study. Setting Six large hospitals in Europe, North America, Asia, and Oceania. Participants 3012 consecutive patients presenting over 12 months with upper gastrointestinal bleeding. Main outcome measures Comparison of pre-endoscopy scores (admission Rockall, AIMS65, and Glasgow Blatchford) and post-endoscopy scores (full Rockall and PNED) for their ability to predict predefined clinical endpoints: a composite endpoint (transfusion, endoscopic treatment, interventional radiology, surgery, or 30 day mortality), endoscopic treatment, 30 day mortality, rebleeding, and length of hospital stay. Optimum score thresholds to identify low risk and high risk patients were determined. Results The Glasgow Blatchford score was best (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) 0.86) at predicting intervention or death compared with the full Rockall score (0.70), PNED score (0.69), admission Rockall score (0.66, and AIMS65 score (0.68) (all P<0.001). A Glasgow Blatchford score of ≤1 was the optimum threshold to predict survival without intervention (sensitivity 98.6%, specificity 34.6%). The Glasgow Blatchford score was better at predicting endoscopic treatment (AUROC 0.75) than the AIMS65 (0.62) and admission Rockall scores (0.61) (both P<0.001). A Glasgow Blatchford score of ≥7 was the optimum threshold to predict endoscopic treatment (sensitivity 80%, specificity 57%). The PNED (AUROC 0.77) and AIMS65 scores (0.77) were best at predicting mortality, with both superior to admission Rockall score (0.72) and Glasgow Blatchford score (0.64; P<0.001). Score thresholds of ≥4 for PNED, ≥2 for AIMS65, ≥4 for admission Rockall, and ≥5 for full Rockall were optimal at predicting death, with sensitivities of 65.8-78.6% and specificities of 65.0-65.3%. No score was helpful at predicting rebleeding or length of stay. Conclusions The Glasgow Blatchford score has high accuracy at predicting need for hospital based intervention or death. Scores of ≤1 appear the optimum threshold for directing patients to outpatient management. AUROCs of scores for the other endpoints are less than 0.80, therefore their clinical utility for these outcomes seems to be limited. Trial registration Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN16235737.
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spelling pubmed-52177682017-01-10 Comparison of risk scoring systems for patients presenting with upper gastrointestinal bleeding: international multicentre prospective study Stanley, Adrian J Laine, Loren Dalton, Harry R Ngu, Jing H Schultz, Michael Abazi, Roseta Zakko, Liam Thornton, Susan Wilkinson, Kelly Khor, Cristopher J L Murray, Iain A Laursen, Stig B BMJ Research Objective To compare the predictive accuracy and clinical utility of five risk scoring systems in the assessment of patients with upper gastrointestinal bleeding. Design International multicentre prospective study. Setting Six large hospitals in Europe, North America, Asia, and Oceania. Participants 3012 consecutive patients presenting over 12 months with upper gastrointestinal bleeding. Main outcome measures Comparison of pre-endoscopy scores (admission Rockall, AIMS65, and Glasgow Blatchford) and post-endoscopy scores (full Rockall and PNED) for their ability to predict predefined clinical endpoints: a composite endpoint (transfusion, endoscopic treatment, interventional radiology, surgery, or 30 day mortality), endoscopic treatment, 30 day mortality, rebleeding, and length of hospital stay. Optimum score thresholds to identify low risk and high risk patients were determined. Results The Glasgow Blatchford score was best (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) 0.86) at predicting intervention or death compared with the full Rockall score (0.70), PNED score (0.69), admission Rockall score (0.66, and AIMS65 score (0.68) (all P<0.001). A Glasgow Blatchford score of ≤1 was the optimum threshold to predict survival without intervention (sensitivity 98.6%, specificity 34.6%). The Glasgow Blatchford score was better at predicting endoscopic treatment (AUROC 0.75) than the AIMS65 (0.62) and admission Rockall scores (0.61) (both P<0.001). A Glasgow Blatchford score of ≥7 was the optimum threshold to predict endoscopic treatment (sensitivity 80%, specificity 57%). The PNED (AUROC 0.77) and AIMS65 scores (0.77) were best at predicting mortality, with both superior to admission Rockall score (0.72) and Glasgow Blatchford score (0.64; P<0.001). Score thresholds of ≥4 for PNED, ≥2 for AIMS65, ≥4 for admission Rockall, and ≥5 for full Rockall were optimal at predicting death, with sensitivities of 65.8-78.6% and specificities of 65.0-65.3%. No score was helpful at predicting rebleeding or length of stay. Conclusions The Glasgow Blatchford score has high accuracy at predicting need for hospital based intervention or death. Scores of ≤1 appear the optimum threshold for directing patients to outpatient management. AUROCs of scores for the other endpoints are less than 0.80, therefore their clinical utility for these outcomes seems to be limited. Trial registration Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN16235737. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2017-01-04 /pmc/articles/PMC5217768/ /pubmed/28053181 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.i6432 Text en Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 3.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/.
spellingShingle Research
Stanley, Adrian J
Laine, Loren
Dalton, Harry R
Ngu, Jing H
Schultz, Michael
Abazi, Roseta
Zakko, Liam
Thornton, Susan
Wilkinson, Kelly
Khor, Cristopher J L
Murray, Iain A
Laursen, Stig B
Comparison of risk scoring systems for patients presenting with upper gastrointestinal bleeding: international multicentre prospective study
title Comparison of risk scoring systems for patients presenting with upper gastrointestinal bleeding: international multicentre prospective study
title_full Comparison of risk scoring systems for patients presenting with upper gastrointestinal bleeding: international multicentre prospective study
title_fullStr Comparison of risk scoring systems for patients presenting with upper gastrointestinal bleeding: international multicentre prospective study
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of risk scoring systems for patients presenting with upper gastrointestinal bleeding: international multicentre prospective study
title_short Comparison of risk scoring systems for patients presenting with upper gastrointestinal bleeding: international multicentre prospective study
title_sort comparison of risk scoring systems for patients presenting with upper gastrointestinal bleeding: international multicentre prospective study
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5217768/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28053181
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.i6432
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