Litcius/Paper detail

A Review of Risk Scores within Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding

Josh Orpen‐Palmer, Adrian J. Stanley

2023Journal of Clinical Medicine29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Upper gastrointestinal bleeding is a common medical emergency. Thorough initial assessment and appropriate resuscitation are essential to stabilise the patient. Risk scores provide an important tool to discriminate between lower- and higher-risk patients. Very low-risk patients can be safely discharged for out-patient management, while higher-risk patients can receive appropriate in-patient care. The Glasgow Blatchford Score, with a score of 0-1, performs best in the identification of very low-risk patients who will not require hospital based intervention or die, and is recommended by most guidelines to facilitate safe out-patient management. The performance of risk scores in the identification of specific adverse events to define high-risk patients is less accurate, with no individual score performing consistently well. Ongoing developments in the use of machine learning models and artificial intelligence in predicting poor outcomes in UGIB appear promising and will likely form the basis of dynamic risk assessment in the future.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineRisk assessmentUpper gastrointestinal bleedingIntensive care medicineResuscitationEmergency medicineIntervention (counseling)Identification (biology)Framingham Risk ScoreEmergency departmentGastrointestinal bleedingMedical emergencySurgeryInternal medicineEndoscopyPsychiatryBiologyDiseaseBotanyComputer securityComputer scienceGastrointestinal Bleeding Diagnosis and TreatmentGastrointestinal disorders and treatmentsEsophageal and GI Pathology