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Early Administration of Vapreotide for Variceal Bleeding in Patients with Cirrhosis

Authors :
Paul Calès
Claude Masliah
Brigitte Bernard
Pierre-Philippe Garnier
Christine Silvain
Nathalie Szostak-Talbodec
Jean-Pierre Bronowicki
Didier Ribard
Danièle Botta-Fridlund
Patrick Hillon
Kamel Besseghir
Didier Lebrec
Thierry Poynard
Pierre Verger
Jean-Claude Paris
Francois Durand
Dominique-Charles Valla
Alex Lemaire
Michel Rouch
Alain Blanchi
Olivier Ink
Faouzi Saliba
Gilles Galula
Bernard Pillegand
Thierry Davion
Thong Dao
Corinne Bonny
Jean-Pierre Zarski
Francois Mion
Source :
New England Journal of Medicine. 344:23-28
Publication Year :
2001
Publisher :
Massachusetts Medical Society, 2001.

Abstract

In patients with cirrhosis, pharmacologic or endoscopic treatment may control variceal bleeding. However, the effects of early administration of a somatostatin analogue followed by endoscopic treatment are unknown.We studied the effects of treatment with vapreotide, a somatostatin analogue, begun before endoscopic treatment in 227 patients with cirrhosis who were hospitalized for acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding. The patients were randomly assigned to receive vapreotide (a 50-microg intravenous bolus followed by an infusion at a rate of 50 microg per hour for five days) or placebo within a mean (+/-SD) of 2.3+/-1.5 hours after admission. All the patients received endoscopic treatment a mean of 2.6+/-3.3 hours after the infusion was begun. After the exclusion of 31 patients whose bleeding was not caused by portal hypertension, there were 98 patients in each group.At the time of endoscopy, active bleeding was evident in 28 of 91 patients in the vapreotide group (31 percent), as compared with 43 of 93 patients in the placebo group (46 percent) (P=0.03). During the five-day infusion, the primary objective--survival and control of bleeding--was achieved in 65 of 98 patients in the vapreotide group (66 percent) as compared with 49 of 98 patients in the placebo group (50 percent) (P=0.02). The patients in the vapreotide group received significantly fewer blood transfusions (2.0+/-2.2 vs. 2.8+/-2.8 units, P=0.04). Overall mortality rates at 42 days were not significantly different in the two groups.In patients with cirrhosis and variceal bleeding, the combination of vapreotide and endoscopic treatment is more effective than endoscopic treatment alone as a method of controlling acute bleeding. However, the use of combination therapy does not affect mortality rates at 42 days.

Details

ISSN :
15334406 and 00284793
Volume :
344
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
New England Journal of Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....46512f1578a08ecb4ee545bc760eae3d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm200101043440104