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Hemostatic powder TC-325 treatment of malignancy-related upper gastrointestinal bleeds: International registry outcomes

Hemostatic powder TC-325 treatment of malignancy-related upper gastrointestinal bleeds: International registry outcomes
Hemostatic powder TC-325 treatment of malignancy-related upper gastrointestinal bleeds: International registry outcomes

Background and Aim: Upper gastrointestinal tumors account for 5% of upper gastrointestinal bleeds. These patients are challenging to treat due to the diffuse nature of the neoplastic bleeding lesions, high rebleeding rates, and significant transfusion requirements. TC-325 (Cook Medical, North Carolina, USA) is a hemostatic powder for gastrointestinal bleeding. The aim of this study was to examine the outcomes of upper gastrointestinal bleeds secondary to tumors treated with Hemospray therapy. Methods: Data were prospectively collected on the use of Hemospray from 17 centers. Hemospray was used during emergency endoscopy for upper gastrointestinal bleeds secondary to tumors at the discretion of the endoscopist as a monotherapy, dual therapy with standard hemostatic techniques, or rescue therapy. Results: One hundred and five patients with upper gastrointestinal bleeds secondary to tumors were recruited. The median Blatchford score at baseline was 10 (interquartile range [IQR], 7–12). The median Rockall score was 8 (IQR, 7–9). Immediate hemostasis was achieved in 102/105 (97%) patients, 15% of patients had a 30-day rebleed, 20% of patients died within 30 days (all-cause mortality). There was a significant improvement in transfusion requirements following treatment (P < 0.001) when comparing the number of units transfused 3 weeks before and after treatment. The mean reduction was one unit per patient. Conclusions: Hemospray achieved high rates of immediate hemostasis, with comparable rebleed rates following treatment of tumor-related upper gastrointestinal bleeds. Hemospray helped in improving transfusion requirements in these patients. This allows for patient stabilization and bridges towards definitive surgery or radiotherapy to treat the underlying tumor.

endoscopy, malignancy, non-variceal, upper gastrointestinal bleeding, upper GI
0815-9319
3027-3032
Hussein, Mohamed
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Alzoubaidi, Durayd
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O'Donnell, Michael
3cbcd4d3-d41b-4b06-8e75-c3c4ca3efb00
de la Serna, Alvaro
3c2c678e-edf5-45c7-b53c-80629dd097fa
Bassett, Paul
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Varbobitis, Ioannis
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Hengehold, Tricia
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Ortiz Fernandez-Sordo, Jacobo
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Rey, Johannes W.
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Hayee, Bu'Hussain
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Despott, Edward J.
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Murino, Alberto
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Graham, David
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Latorre, Melissa
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Moreea, Sulleman
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Boger, Phillip
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Dunn, Jason
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Mainie, Inder
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Mullady, Daniel
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Early, Dayna
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Ragunath, Krish
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Anderson, John
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Bhandari, Pradeep
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Goetz, Martin
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Kiesslich, Ralf
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Coron, Emmanuel
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Rodriguez de Santiago, Enrique
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Gonda, Tamas
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Gross, Seth A.
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Lovat, Laurence B.
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Haidry, Rehan
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Hussein, Mohamed
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Alzoubaidi, Durayd
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O'Donnell, Michael
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de la Serna, Alvaro
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Bassett, Paul
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Varbobitis, Ioannis
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Hengehold, Tricia
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Ortiz Fernandez-Sordo, Jacobo
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Rey, Johannes W.
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Hayee, Bu'Hussain
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Despott, Edward J.
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Murino, Alberto
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Graham, David
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Latorre, Melissa
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Moreea, Sulleman
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Boger, Phillip
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Dunn, Jason
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Mainie, Inder
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Mullady, Daniel
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Early, Dayna
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Ragunath, Krish
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Anderson, John
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Bhandari, Pradeep
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Goetz, Martin
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Kiesslich, Ralf
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Coron, Emmanuel
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Rodriguez de Santiago, Enrique
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Gonda, Tamas
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Gross, Seth A.
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Lovat, Laurence B.
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Haidry, Rehan
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Hussein, Mohamed, Alzoubaidi, Durayd, O'Donnell, Michael, de la Serna, Alvaro, Bassett, Paul, Varbobitis, Ioannis, Hengehold, Tricia, Ortiz Fernandez-Sordo, Jacobo, Rey, Johannes W., Hayee, Bu'Hussain, Despott, Edward J., Murino, Alberto, Graham, David, Latorre, Melissa, Moreea, Sulleman, Boger, Phillip, Dunn, Jason, Mainie, Inder, Mullady, Daniel, Early, Dayna, Ragunath, Krish, Anderson, John, Bhandari, Pradeep, Goetz, Martin, Kiesslich, Ralf, Coron, Emmanuel, Rodriguez de Santiago, Enrique, Gonda, Tamas, Gross, Seth A., Lovat, Laurence B. and Haidry, Rehan (2021) Hemostatic powder TC-325 treatment of malignancy-related upper gastrointestinal bleeds: International registry outcomes. Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology (Australia), 36 (11), 3027-3032. (doi:10.1111/jgh.15579).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background and Aim: Upper gastrointestinal tumors account for 5% of upper gastrointestinal bleeds. These patients are challenging to treat due to the diffuse nature of the neoplastic bleeding lesions, high rebleeding rates, and significant transfusion requirements. TC-325 (Cook Medical, North Carolina, USA) is a hemostatic powder for gastrointestinal bleeding. The aim of this study was to examine the outcomes of upper gastrointestinal bleeds secondary to tumors treated with Hemospray therapy. Methods: Data were prospectively collected on the use of Hemospray from 17 centers. Hemospray was used during emergency endoscopy for upper gastrointestinal bleeds secondary to tumors at the discretion of the endoscopist as a monotherapy, dual therapy with standard hemostatic techniques, or rescue therapy. Results: One hundred and five patients with upper gastrointestinal bleeds secondary to tumors were recruited. The median Blatchford score at baseline was 10 (interquartile range [IQR], 7–12). The median Rockall score was 8 (IQR, 7–9). Immediate hemostasis was achieved in 102/105 (97%) patients, 15% of patients had a 30-day rebleed, 20% of patients died within 30 days (all-cause mortality). There was a significant improvement in transfusion requirements following treatment (P < 0.001) when comparing the number of units transfused 3 weeks before and after treatment. The mean reduction was one unit per patient. Conclusions: Hemospray achieved high rates of immediate hemostasis, with comparable rebleed rates following treatment of tumor-related upper gastrointestinal bleeds. Hemospray helped in improving transfusion requirements in these patients. This allows for patient stabilization and bridges towards definitive surgery or radiotherapy to treat the underlying tumor.

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J of Gastro and Hepatol - 2021 - Hussein - Hemostatic powder TC‐325 treatment of malignancy‐related upper gastrointestinal (1) - Version of Record
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Published date: 15 June 2021
Keywords: endoscopy, malignancy, non-variceal, upper gastrointestinal bleeding, upper GI

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Local EPrints ID: 453428
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/453428
ISSN: 0815-9319
PURE UUID: ac8ef9dc-47db-4a5a-8d43-2d5640607fc4

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Date deposited: 14 Jan 2022 17:40
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 12:53

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Contributors

Author: Mohamed Hussein
Author: Durayd Alzoubaidi
Author: Michael O'Donnell
Author: Alvaro de la Serna
Author: Paul Bassett
Author: Ioannis Varbobitis
Author: Tricia Hengehold
Author: Jacobo Ortiz Fernandez-Sordo
Author: Johannes W. Rey
Author: Bu'Hussain Hayee
Author: Edward J. Despott
Author: Alberto Murino
Author: David Graham
Author: Melissa Latorre
Author: Sulleman Moreea
Author: Phillip Boger
Author: Jason Dunn
Author: Inder Mainie
Author: Daniel Mullady
Author: Dayna Early
Author: Krish Ragunath
Author: John Anderson
Author: Pradeep Bhandari
Author: Martin Goetz
Author: Ralf Kiesslich
Author: Emmanuel Coron
Author: Enrique Rodriguez de Santiago
Author: Tamas Gonda
Author: Seth A. Gross
Author: Laurence B. Lovat
Author: Rehan Haidry

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