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Capsule endoscopy in young patients with iron deficiency anaemia and negative bidirectional gastrointestinal endoscopy

Authors :
Yung, D.E. Rondonotti, E. Giannakou, A. Avni, T. Rosa, B. Toth, E. Lucendo, A.J. Sidhu, R. Beaumont, H. Ellul, P. Negreanu, L. Jiménez-Garcia, V.A. McNamara, D. Kopylov, U. Elli, L. Triantafyllou, K. Shibli, F. Riccioni, M.E. Bruno, M. Dray, X. Plevris, J.N. Koulaouzidis, A. And the Capsule Endoscopy in Young Patients with IDA research group Argüelles-Arias, F. Becq, A. Branchi, F. Tejero-Bustos, M.Á. Cotter, J. Eliakim, R. Ferretti, F. Gralnek, I.M. Herrerias-Gutierrez, J.M. Hussey, M. Jacobs, M. Johansson, G.W. McAlindon, M. Montiero, S. Nemeth, A. Pennazio, M. Rattehalli, D. Stemate, A. Tortora, A. Tziatzios, G.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Background: Recent data imply young patients (age ≤50 years) undergoing small-bowel (SB) capsule endoscopy (CE) for iron deficiency anaemia (IDA) show higher diagnostic yield (DY) for sinister pathology. We aimed to investigate DY of CE in a large cohort of young IDA patients, and evaluate factors predicting significant SB pathology. Materials and methods: This was a retrospective, multicentre study (2010–2015) in consecutive, young patients (≤50 years) from 18 centres/12 countries, with negative bidirectional gastrointestinal (GI) endoscopy undergoing SBCE for IDA. Exclusion criteria: previous/ongoing obscure-overt GI bleeding; age 50 years; comorbidities associated with IDA. Data retrieved: SBCE indications; prior investigations; medications; SBCE findings; final diagnosis. Clinical and laboratory data were analysed by multivariate logistic regression. Results: Data on 389 young IDA patients were retrieved. In total, 169 (43.4%) were excluded due to incomplete clinical data; data from 220 (122F/98M; mean age 40.5 ± 8.6 years) patients were analysed. Some 71 patients had at least one clinically significant SBCE finding (DY: 32.3%). They were divided into two groups: neoplastic pathology (10/220; 4.5%), and non-neoplastic but clinically significant pathology (61/220; 27.7%). The most common significant but non-neoplastic pathologies were angioectasias (22/61) and Crohn’s disease (15/61). On multivariate analysis, weight loss and lower mean corpuscular volume(MCV) were associated with significant SB pathology (OR: 3.87; 95%CI: 1.3–11.3; p = 0.01; and OR: 0.96; 95%CI: 0.92–0.99; p = 0.03; respectively). Our model also demonstrates association between use of antiplatelets and significant SB pathology, although due to the small number of patients, definitive conclusions cannot be drawn. Conclusion: In IDA patients ≤50 years with negative bidirectional GI endoscopy, overall DY of SBCE for clinically significant findings was 32.3%. Some 5% of our cohort was diagnosed with SB neoplasia; lower MCV or weight loss were associated with higher DY for SB pathology. © 2017, © Author(s) 2017.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......2127..a1b83179207466f8653a44a1a5260c75