Abstract

ARTICLE SUMMARY A randomized study was conducted comparing two-year survival and rebleeding rates in patients with liver cirrhosis (Child-Pugh score 12 or less) receiving either transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) (n=41) or serial endoscopic variceal ligation (EVL) (n=39) after initial control of bleeding. Patients with fundal varices were excluded. There was no difference in the two-year rates of survival between the groups (57% in the TIPS group compared with 56% in the EVL group), whereas the two-year rebleeding rates were 18.5% in the TIPS group and 66% in the EVL group (P<0.001). No patient who received TIPS suffered uncontrolled bleeding, whereas 11 banded patients had uncontrolled bleeding – of whom eight underwent emergency TIPS and the remaining three died. There was no difference in the rates of encephalopathy at two years between the two groups (44% in the TIPS group, 47% in the EVL group). Likewise, the numbers of days spent in hospital were similar between the two groups, both during the index bleed and over two years. The probability of shunt dysfunction in the TIPS group was 73% at two years.

Highlights

  • COMMENTARY In the field of gastroenterology/hepatology, there are few emergencies that can be as dramatic and life-threatening as an acute variceal bleed

  • Uncontrolled early rebleeding in the EVL group was controlled in most cases by emergency Transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS)

  • Is TIPS the ‘final answer’ for acute variceal bleeding? The answer depends on clinical judgment and circumstances

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Summary

Introduction

COMMENTARY In the field of gastroenterology/hepatology, there are few emergencies that can be as dramatic and life-threatening as an acute variceal bleed. Can J Gastroenterol Vol 16 No 2 February 2002

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Conclusion

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