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Small Bowel Angioectasia As a Marker of Frailty and Poor Prognosis

Overview
Journal Endosc Int Open
Specialty Gastroenterology
Date 2020 Jul 7
PMID 32626818
Citations 3
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Abstract

This study aimed to establish 5-year survival of patients diagnosed with bleeding small bowel (SB) angioectasia, with the hypothesis that many will suffer deaths relating to comorbidity rather than gastrointestinaI bleeding. SB capsule endoscopy (SBCE) procedures, performed for suspected SB bleeding or iron deficiency anemia, with angioectasia isolated as the cause of SB bleeding and at least 5 years of follow-up data were isolated (n = 125) along with an age-matched group with "normal" SBCE procedures (n = 125). These were retrospectively analysed with further information on mortality and comorbidity gathered through hospital records. Those with angioectasia had a median age of 72.7 years and comorbidities were common. The 5-year survival was 64.0 % (80/125) compared to 70.4 % (88/125) in those with "normal" SBCE. Those with significant cardiac or vascular comorbidity had a poorer survival (52.9 % (37/70) at 5 years) but anticoagulation/antiplatelets/ number of lesions or requirement endoscopic treatment seemed to make little difference. In those with SB bleeding secondary to angioectasia none of the subsequent deaths were directly attributable to gastrointestinal bleeding. In this cohort, SB angioectasia did not lead to any deaths but the 5-year survival was poor due to those diagnosed often being older and having comorbidities. This would support the hypothesis that a diagnosis of SB bleeding secondary to angioectasia suggests frailty.

Citing Articles

Small-Bowel Angioectasias: Are They Responsible for a Real Impact on Survival?.

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Octa-nonagenarians can perform video capsule endoscopy safely and with a higher diagnostic yield than 65-79-year-old patients.

Thurm T, Gluck N, Barak O, Deutsch L J Am Geriatr Soc. 2022; 70(10):2958-2966.

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Risk of Rebleeding in Patients with Small Bowel Vascular Lesions.

Harada A, Torisu T, Fujioka S, Yoshida Y, Okamoto Y, Fuyuno Y Intern Med. 2021; 60(23):3663-3669.

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