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Terlipressin vs. Somatostatin in bleeding esophageal varices: A controlled, double‐blind study
Author(s) -
Walker Siegfried,
Kreichgauer HeinzPeter,
Bode J. Christian
Publication year - 1992
Publication title -
hepatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.488
H-Index - 361
eISSN - 1527-3350
pISSN - 0270-9139
DOI - 10.1002/hep.1840150609
Subject(s) - terlipressin , medicine , balloon tamponade , somatostatin , octreotide , bolus (digestion) , anesthesia , esophageal varices , placebo , tamponade , gastroenterology , surgery , cirrhosis , portal hypertension , hepatorenal syndrome , alternative medicine , pathology
Fifty episodes of bleeding from esophageal or gastric varices in 33 patients with cirrhosis were randomized to treatment with either intravenous terlipressin (2 mg initially and 1 mg every 4 hr for 24 hr together with bolus injection and continuous infusion of placebo) or with somatostatin (250 μg as a bolus and continuous infusion of 250 μg/hr somatostatin for 24 hr and placebo injections). Standard therapy with transfusions, fluid and electrolyte correction and lactulose was administered in both groups. In the terlipressin group, 22 of 25 bleeding episodes (88%) were initially stopped by the vasoactive drugs, and in the somatostatin group 19 of 25 bleeding episodes (76%) were initially stopped by the vasoactive drugs. Two of the three bleeding episodes not arrested by terlipressin and five of the six bleeding episodes not arrested by somatostatin were controlled by balloon tamponade. In one patient in each group variceal bleeding initially could not be stopped, and the patients died. The failure rate of the vasoactive treatment alone, including rebleeding episodes within the study period, was 20% in the terlipressin group and 32% in the somatostatin group. The control rate, including balloon tamponade, was 96% in both groups. The hospital mortality rate was 16% (4 of 25) in the terlipressin group and 24% (6 of 25) in the somatostatin group. Blood transfusions, use of balloon tamponade and duration of bleeding did not differ significantly. This interim analysis of the ongoing study indicates that a large proportion of bleeding episodes from esophageal and fundic varices can be stopped initially (82%) and definitively controlled (74%) by vasoactive drugs alone. Differences in the effectiveness of terlipressin and somatostatin were not observed. (H EPATOLOGY 1992;15:1023‐1030).

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