AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to create and validate a new scoring system to assess the risk of adverse outcomes in patients experiencing lower gastrointestinal bleeding, which often lacks clear risk factor data.
  • A total of 2385 patients were analyzed using multivariate logistic regression to derive the score and compare its effectiveness against the existing Oakland score through AUROC curve analysis.
  • The results showed that the new scoring system indicates a significantly lower risk of 30-day rebleeding compared to the Oakland score, suggesting that it may be more effective for predicting rebleeding, though both scores need further prospective evaluation.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Lower gastrointestinal bleeding is a common presentation with little data concerning risk factors for adverse outcomes. The aim was to derive and validate a scoring system to stratify risk in lower gastrointestinal bleeding and compare it to the Oakland score.

Methods: A total of 2385 consecutive patients (mean age 65 years, 1140 males) were used to derive the score using multivariate logistic regression modeling then internally and externally validated. The Oakland score was applied and area under receiver operating characteristic (AUROC) curves were calculated and compared. A score of <1 was compared with an Oakland score of <9 to assess 30-day rebleeding and mortality rates.

Results: Rebleeding was associated with age, inpatient bleeding, syncope, malignancy, tachycardia, hypotension, lower hemoglobin and mortality with age, inpatient bleeding, liver/gastrointestinal disease, tachycardia, and hypotension. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curves was 0.742 for rebleeding and 0.802 for mortality. A score <1 was associated with rebleeding (0.0%-2.2%) and mortality (0%). The Oakland score had a significantly lower area under the receiver operating characteristic curve for rebleeding of 0.687 but not for mortality; 0.757. A score <1 was associated with a lower 30-day rebleeding risk compared to an Oakland score <9 (4/379 vs. 15/355, = 0.009) but not mortality (0/365 vs. 1/355, = 0.493).

Conclusions: Our score predicts 30-day rebleeding and mortality rate with low scores associated with very low risk. The Aberdeen score is superior to the Oakland score for predicting rebleeding. Prospective evaluation of both scores is required.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10713870PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/deo2.323DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

lower gastrointestinal
12
scoring system
8
gastrointestinal bleeding
8
derivation validation
4
validation comparison
4
comparison prognostic
4
prognostic scoring
4
system acute
4
acute lower
4
bleeding objectives
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!