作者
Shiv Kumar Sarin,Ashish Kumar,Peter W Angus,Sanjay Saran Baijal,Soon Koo Baik,Yusuf Bayraktar,Yogesh Chawla,Gourdas Choudhuri,Jin Wook Chung,Roberto de Franchis,H. Janaka de Silva,Hitendra Garg,Pramod Kumar Garg,Ahmed Helmy,Ming-Chih Hou,Wasim Jafri,Ji Dong Jia,George Lau,Chang-Zheng Li,Hock Foong Lui,Hitoshi Maruyama,Chandra M. Pandey,Puri As,Rungsun Rerknimitr,Peush Sahni,Anoop Saraya,Barjesh Chander Sharma,Praveen Sharma,Gamal Shiha,Jose D. Sollano,Justin C.Y. Wu,Rui Xu,Surender Kumar Yachha,Chunqing Zhang
摘要
Acute variceal bleeding (AVB) is a medical emergency and associated with a mortality of 20% at 6 weeks. Significant advances have occurred in the recent past and hence there is a need to update the existing consensus guidelines. There is also a need to include the literature from the Eastern and Asian countries where majority of patients with portal hypertension (PHT) live.The expert working party, predominantly from the Asia-Pacific region, reviewed the existing literature and deliberated to develop consensus guidelines. The working party adopted the Oxford system for developing an evidence-based approach. Only those statements that were unanimously approved by the experts were accepted.AVB is defined as a bleed in a known or suspected case of PHT, with the presence of hematemesis within 24 h of presentation, and/or ongoing melena, with last melanic stool within last 24 h. The time frame for the AVB episode is 48 h. AVB is further classified as active or inactive at the time of endoscopy. Combination therapy with vasoactive drugs (<30 min of hospitalization) and endoscopic variceal ligation (door to scope time <6 h) is accepted as first-line therapy. Rebleeding (48 h of T (0)) is further sub-classified as very early rebleeding (48 to 120 h from T (0)), early rebleeding (6 to 42 days from T (0)) and late rebleeding (after 42 days from T (0)) to maintain uniformity in clinical trials. Emphasis should be to evaluate the role of adjusted blood requirement index (ABRI), assessment of associated comorbid conditions and poor predictors of non-response to combination therapy, and proposed APASL (Asian Pacific Association for Study of the Liver) Severity Score in assessing these patients. Role of hepatic venous pressure gradient in AVB is considered useful. Antibiotic (cephalosporins) prophylaxis is recommended and search for acute ischemic hepatic injury should be done. New guidelines have been developed for management of variceal bleed in patients with non-cirrhotic PHT and variceal bleed in pediatric patients.Management of acute variceal bleeding in Asia-Pacific region needs special attention for uniformity of treatment and future clinical trials.