Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04104425

Lactate Level and Gastrointestinal Bleeding

Role of Lactate Level in Prediction of Patients'Acute Gastrointestinal Bleeding Admissions to Intensive Care Unit, Interventions and Short Term Outcomes

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
300 (actual)
Sponsor
Assiut University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Acute gastrointestinal bleeding is a common emergency with significant morbidity, mortality, and cost. Appropriate risk stratification of patients presenting with acute gastrointestinal bleeding aids in the triage of patients to determine need for hospital admission and the need for emergency endoscopic intervention. Increased blood lactate levels are common in critically ill patients. Our study will evaluate the usefulness of lactate measurements on resources utilisation ( intensive care unit admission, length of hospital stay) and other patient-oriented outcomes ( need for transfusion and endoscopy) in patients with acute gastrointestinal bleeding.

Detailed description

The present study is a prospective cross sectional study aimed to assess whether venous blood lactate on hospital presentation is predictive of need for interventions and short term outcomes (eg PRBC transfusion, ICU admission ) in patients with acute GIB who presented to ED of Assuit University hospital between September 2019 and June 2022. The study included 300 patients with acute GIB. Out of those patients; 200 patients had elevated blood lactate and 100 patients had normal blood lactate. It was found that mean age of patients with elevated lactate was significantly higher in comparison to those with normal lactate. There were no significant differences between both groups as regard risk factors for bleeding (use of anti-coagulants, aspirin), use of NSAIDs was higher among patients with normal lactate while history of prior UGIB was higher among patients with elevated lactate. The most frequent presentations among the studied patients were hematemesis and melena. Both groups had insignificant differences as regard laboratory data, endoscopic findings and interventions. Patients with elevated lactate had prolonged hospital stay, higher frequency of blood transfusion, ICU admission and mortality in comparison to those with normal blood lactate. Based on the current study, predictors of mortality among patients with UGIB were old age , LC, elevated lactate and variceal bleeding. So we could say that elevated blood lactate can be predictive for interventions and short term outcomes in patients with acute GIB ,however, further and similar studies with multi-center settings would be more reliable and accurate.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2020-01-15
Primary completion
2022-09-15
Completion
2022-09-15
First posted
2019-09-26
Last updated
2023-07-19

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Egypt

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04104425. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.