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ABC score: a new risk score that accurately predicts mortality in acute upper and lower gastrointestinal bleeding: an international multicentre study

Authors :
Laursen, Stig Borbjerg
Oakland, Kathryn
Laine, Loren
Bieber, Vered
Marmo, Riccardo
Redondo-Cerezo, Eduardo
Dalton, Harry R
Ngu, Jeffrey
Schultz, Michael
Soncini, Marco
Gralnek, Ian
Jairath, Vipul
Murray, Iain A
Stanley, Adrian J
Source :
Gut; 2021, Vol. 70 Issue: 4 p707-716, 10p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

ObjectivesExisting scores are not accurate at predicting mortality in upper (UGIB) and lower (LGIB) gastrointestinal bleeding. We aimed to develop and validate a new pre-endoscopy score for predicting mortality in both UGIB and LGIB.Design and settingInternational cohort study. Patients presenting to hospital with UGIB at six international centres were used to develop a risk score for predicting mortality using regression analyses. The score’s performance in UGIB and LGIB was externally validated and compared with existing scores using four international datasets. We calculated areas under receiver operating characteristics curves (AUROCs), sensitivities, specificities and outcome among patients classified as low risk and high risk.Participants and resultsWe included 3012 UGIB patients in the development cohort, and 4019 UGIB and 2336 LGIB patients in the validation cohorts. Age, Blood tests and Comorbidities (ABC) score was closer associated with mortality in UGIB and LGIB (AUROCs: 0.81–84) than existing scores (AUROCs: 0.65–0.75; p≤0.02). In UGIB, patients with low ABC score (≤3), medium ABC score (4–7) and high ABC score (≥8) had 30-day mortality rates of 1.0%, 7.0% and 25%, respectively. Patients classified low risk using ABC score had lower mortality than those classified low risk with AIMS65 (threshold ≤1) (1.0 vs 4.5%; p<0.001). In LGIB, patients with low, medium and high ABC scores had in-hospital mortality rates of 0.6%, 6.3% and 18%, respectively.ConclusionsIn contrast to previous scores, ABC score has good performance for predicting mortality in both UGIB and LGIB, allowing early identification and targeted management of patients at high or low risk of death.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00175749 and 14683288
Volume :
70
Issue :
4
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Gut
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs55493305
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/gutjnl-2019-320002