PTU-072 A multi-centre review of acute upper GI bleeding; can blood urea levels aid diagnosis?. (June 2019)
- Record Type:
- Journal Article
- Title:
- PTU-072 A multi-centre review of acute upper GI bleeding; can blood urea levels aid diagnosis?. (June 2019)
- Main Title:
- PTU-072 A multi-centre review of acute upper GI bleeding; can blood urea levels aid diagnosis?
- Authors:
- Kotecha, Deevia
Mak, Jason
Sharma, Neel
Boulton, Ralph
Disney, Benjamin
Bhala, Neeraj
Verma, Ajay - Abstract:
- Abstract : Introduction: Risk scoring for acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding (AUGIB) is key when assessing patients for requiring OGD. The Rockall score utilises age, comorbidities and shock. The Glasgow-Blatchford score (GBS), in addition, utilises haemoglobin, melaena, and blood urea levels. Raised blood urea levels can represent digestion of blood from the upper gastrointestinal tract giving rise to melaena; the presence of both gives a high GBS. However, inexperienced health care professionals can misinterpret the absence/presence of melaena, raised urea levels may be due to kidney injury. Nevertheless, Gastroenterologists may use urea to diagnose AUGIB if patients haven't had overt/witnessed/reliably reported haematemesis or melaena. It has been shown that a raised urea:creatinine ratio (URCR) can be associated with AUGIB and may be superior to urea alone as it mitigates for kidney injury. 1 However, URCR is not widely used in the UK in the assessment of AUGIB. We aim to assess the association of urea and URCR levels with AUGIB. Methods: A retrospective review at three UK centres (Kettering General Hospital, Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham, and University Hospital Coventry & Warwickshire) was undertaken. Endoscopy reports and blood tests were reviewed of patients undergoing inpatient OGD for suspected AUGIB within 2017/8, data were recorded in an Excel spreadsheet. URCR was calculated by dividing Urea by creatinine, and multiplying by 1000 (abnormal = ≥100).Abstract : Introduction: Risk scoring for acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding (AUGIB) is key when assessing patients for requiring OGD. The Rockall score utilises age, comorbidities and shock. The Glasgow-Blatchford score (GBS), in addition, utilises haemoglobin, melaena, and blood urea levels. Raised blood urea levels can represent digestion of blood from the upper gastrointestinal tract giving rise to melaena; the presence of both gives a high GBS. However, inexperienced health care professionals can misinterpret the absence/presence of melaena, raised urea levels may be due to kidney injury. Nevertheless, Gastroenterologists may use urea to diagnose AUGIB if patients haven't had overt/witnessed/reliably reported haematemesis or melaena. It has been shown that a raised urea:creatinine ratio (URCR) can be associated with AUGIB and may be superior to urea alone as it mitigates for kidney injury. 1 However, URCR is not widely used in the UK in the assessment of AUGIB. We aim to assess the association of urea and URCR levels with AUGIB. Methods: A retrospective review at three UK centres (Kettering General Hospital, Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham, and University Hospital Coventry & Warwickshire) was undertaken. Endoscopy reports and blood tests were reviewed of patients undergoing inpatient OGD for suspected AUGIB within 2017/8, data were recorded in an Excel spreadsheet. URCR was calculated by dividing Urea by creatinine, and multiplying by 1000 (abnormal = ≥100). Statistics were analysed using SPSS. Results: 357 patients' records were reviewed (median age = 68), 179 had a plausible AUGIB (50.1%). Receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curves for Urea gave an area under the curve (AUC) = 0.733 . For URCR, AUC = 0.789 . Binary logistic regression modelling was performed using age, urea, and URCR. χ 2 (3, n = 357) = 102.92, p<0.001. 25–34% of the variance in AUGIB is explained by the model. The model URCR value of 97.7 can be used to predict AUGIB, applying this to our data set correctly identifies 124/179 patients with AUGIB (69.3%), and is predicted to correctly identify 74.5 % . Conclusion: This pilot study has limitations as bleeding lesions may have not been identified at OGD. Urea and URCR have AUCs of 0.733, & 0.789. Logistic regression modelling suggests a URCR level of 100 would correctly identify ∼70% of AUGIB in patients with suggestive symptoms. Outside of firm indications for OGD in suspected AUGIB (shock, previous/suspected variceal bleed), a raised URCR appears to be a useful marker to predict AUGIB: a larger study would be able to test this robustly. Reference: Srygley FD, Gerardo CI, Tran T, Fisher DA. Does this patient have a severe upper gastrointestinal bleed? JAMA 2012;307(10):1072–9. … (more)
- Is Part Of:
- Gut. Volume 68(2019)Supplement 2
- Journal:
- Gut
- Issue:
- Volume 68(2019)Supplement 2
- Issue Display:
- Volume 68, Issue 2 (2019)
- Year:
- 2019
- Volume:
- 68
- Issue:
- 2
- Issue Sort Value:
- 2019-0068-0002-0000
- Page Start:
- A153
- Page End:
- A153
- Publication Date:
- 2019-06
- Subjects:
- Gastroenterology -- Periodicals
616.33 - Journal URLs:
- http://gut.bmjjournals.com ↗
http://www.bmj.com/archive ↗ - DOI:
- 10.1136/gutjnl-2019-BSGAbstracts.288 ↗
- Languages:
- English
- ISSNs:
- 0017-5749
- Deposit Type:
- Legaldeposit
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- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library DSC - BLDSS-3PM
British Library HMNTS - ELD Digital store - Ingest File:
- 18573.xml