3 research outputs found
Early administration of somatostatin and efficacy of sclerotherapy in acute oesophageal variceal bleeds: the European acute bleeding oesophageal variceal episodes (ABOVE) randomised trial
Background Sclerotherapy is widely used for acute variceal bleeding,
although in emergencies bleeding makes it difficult to obtain the clear
view required for safe and effective treatment. We investigated whether
early administration of somatostatin would improve the efficacy of
sclerotherapy.
Methods In this double-blind, prospective trial, patients who had
cirrhosis with upper-gastrointestinal bleeding were randomly assigned
natural somatostatin (6 mg per 24 h) or placebo for 120 h. In addition,
intravenous bolus doses of somatostatin (250 mu g) or placebo were
injected after the start of the infusion, before emergency endoscopy or
sclerotherapy, and when active bleeding was observed. The primary
endpoint was treatment failure, defined as the occurrence during the
infusion period of at least one of: excess transfusion of blood
products, haematemesis, haemodynamic instability, need for rescue
therapy, or death.
Findings: 205 patients were enrolled: 101 received somatostatin and 104
received placebo. Treatment failed in 35 somatostatin and 57 placebo
recipients (p=0.004); death or use of rescue therapy occurred in nine
and 19 patients, respectively (p=0.05). The mean quantity of blood
products transfused over 120 h (adjusted for baseline haemoglobin) was
2.64 (SD 0.35) units in the somatostatin group versus 3.62 (0.35) units
in the placebo group (p=0.05). At endoscopy, active bleeding from
oesophageal varices was less frequent (27 vs 42 patients, p=0.012) and
the sclerotherapy procedure was easier (2.8 vs 4.7 cm, p=0.0027) in the
somatostatin than in the placebo group.
Interpretation Early administration of natural somatostatin continued
for 120 h, combined with additional bolus injections, is more effective
than placebo in the overall control of acute variceal haemorrhage in
patients with cirrhosis undergoing sclerotherapy