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Early Selective TAE to Severely Bleeding Peptic Ulcers After Their Initial Endoscopic Hemostasis

Early Selective Angiographic Embolization to Severely Bleeding Peptic Ulcers After Their Initial Endoscopic Hemostasis - a Randomized Controlled Trial

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01142180
Enrollment
258
Registered
2010-06-11
Start date
2010-01-31
Completion date
2014-07-31
Last updated
2018-07-18

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Bleeding, Peptic Ulcer, Arterial Embolization

Keywords

Bleeding peptic ulcer, Active bleeding, Trans-arterial angiographic embolization

Brief summary

The aim of this study is to determine if early angiographic embolization can forestall recurrent bleeding in selected high risk ulcers after their initial endoscopic control; to validate prospectively the investigators proposed in selecting high risk ulcers for recurrent bleeding in spite of maximal endoscopic control and profound acid suppression using high dose intravenous infusion of proton pump inhibitor; to characterize the nature of bleeding arteries in severely bleeding peptic ulcers and determine the efficacy of angiographic embolization in the prevention of recurrent bleeding and to establish safety profile of angiographic embolization as an early elective treatment to bleeding peptic ulcers.

Detailed description

Endoscopic therapy is now the treatment of choice in patients with actively bleeding peptic ulcers and ulcers with non-bleeding visible vessels. Following endoscopic control of bleeding, we showed that the use of a high dose intravenous infusion of proton pump inhibitor (PPI) for 72 hours further reduced rate of recurrent bleeding \[Lau NEJM 2000\]. Recurrent bleeding still occurs in 8 to 10 percent of patients who receive the above treatment regime. The associated mortality following a rebleed is 4-10 fold higher when compared to those without recurrent bleeding. In a logistic regression model involving 1144 patients after successful endoscopic thermocoagulation to their bleeding peptic ulcers, we demonstrated that several factors independently predicted recurrent bleeding. They included hypotension, hemoglobin \<10g/dl, fresh blood in the stomach, ulcer size \> 2cm and active bleeding during endoscopy \[Wong Gut 2003\]. When we applied this model in a cohort of 945 patients who underwent endoscopic control of bleeding to their ulcers and adjunctive use of high dose intravenous PPI, 275 belonged to the high risk group. Of them, rebleeding leading to surgery or death occurred in 46 patients (16.7%)\[Chiu DDW 2007\]. Endoscopic treatment to bleeding peptic ulcers has its own limit. In an ex vivo bleeding model using canine mesenteric arteries, endoscopic thermocoagulation could only consistently seal arteries up to 2 mm in size \[Johnson Gastro 1987\]. Trans-arterial angiography allows clinicians to study and characterize bleeding arteries underneath peptic ulcers. In ulcers that erode into major arteries such as the gastro-duodenal artery complex and branches from left gastric artery, angiography complements endoscopic therapy in the form of selective coiling of the bleeding artery. Trans-arterial angiographic coiling can provide definitive control of bleeding from larger arteries i.e. \> 2 mm in size. In cohort studies, trans-arterial angiographic coiling has been shown to compare favorably to surgery, and is less invasive in the control of severe bleeding in peptic

Interventions

PROCEDURETAE

The procedure will be performed within 12 hours of endoscopic therapy. This is usually performed under conscious sedation

PROCEDURENo TAE

No TAE procedure will be performed after endoscopic treatment

Sponsors

King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital
CollaboratorOTHER
Chinese University of Hong Kong
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Actively bleeding peptic ulcers (Forrest I), NBVV or Forrest IIa ulcer, * Successful endoscopic hemostasis by combination treatment of injected epinephrine followed by either 3.2mm heat probe 30J (4 continuous pulses) or hemo-clipping (at least 2 clips) And one of the followings * Spurting hemorrhage during endoscopy; * Ulcer \>= 2 cm is determined by an opened biopsy forceps; * Hb on admission of \< 9 g/dl; or * Hypotension prior to endoscopy defined by SBP of \<90 mmHg AND HR of \>110 bmp

Exclusion criteria

\-

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
clinical re-bleedingwithin 30 days of therapyClinical rebleeding is defined by fresh hematemesis, fresh melena or hematochezia and signs of hypovolemic shock (systolic blood pressure of \<90mmHg and pulse rate \>110 per minute) and a drop in hemoglobin of \> 2 g/dl per 24 hours despite adequate transfusion. Rebleeding will be confirmed by an immediate endoscopy showing fresh blood in stomach or active bleeding from a previously seen ulcer. A clinical rebleeding will be independently reviewed by an adjudication panel.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
death from all causeswithin 30 days of therapydeath from all causes
transfusion requirementwithin 30 days of therapytransfusion requirement
hospital stay including Intensive Care Unit staywithin 30 days of therapyhospital stay including Intensive Care Unit stay
further interventions either further TAE or surgerywithin 30 days of therapyfurther interventions either further TAE or surgery
hospital costswithin 30 days of therapyhospital costs

Countries

China

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 24, 2026