(Press-News.org) BOSTON -- Critically ill patients in hospital intensive care units (ICUs) are routinely prescribed acid-suppressive medications to reduce their risk of developing stress ulcers and gastrointestinal bleeding, both of which can result from being in a stressful environment and from being intubated. Over the years, this routine practice has often been extended to patients outside the ICU, despite a lack of evidence that this population is at significant risk of these complications.
Now a study led by investigators at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) describes a new scoring system to help clinicians better identify non-ICU hospital patients who are at risk for GI bleeding. Appearing in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, the new findings could help doctors to selectively use acid-suppressive medications when needed – and avoid using them when there is no indication that patients are at risk – thereby saving costs and avoiding the medications' sometimes serious side effects.
"Current guidelines recommend against the routine use of acid-suppressive medication to prevent stress ulcers in non-ICU patients. Moreover, there is growing evidence that these drugs are associated with an increased risk of complications, including hospital-acquired pneumonia and clostridium difficile," explains first author Shoshana Herzig, MD, an investigator in BIDMC's Division of General Medicine and Primary Care and Instructor in Medicine at Harvard Medical School. "Despite these factors, acid-suppressive medications continue to be used indiscriminately in non-ICU patients."
However, she adds, eliminating their use altogether is not the answer. "It would be preferable to target use of these medications to patients who need them most. We had observed that there was a lack of evidence to guide physicians in prescribing acid-suppressive medications for stress ulcer prophylaxis in patients outside the ICU. Our goal was to provide data that might help clinicians to more appropriately prescribe these medications."
The authors examined records of 75,723 patient admissions at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center over a four-year period. Patients were excluded if they had been admitted to the hospital with an existing case of GI bleeding, if they developed a bleed within a day of admission or if they were scheduled to undergo cardiac catheterization, which exposes them to high levels of medications that impair clotting.
They found that gastrointestinal bleeding occurred in 203 patients over the study time-frame. The authors then used a statistical modeling technique to approximate the risk of GI bleeding associated with many different potential risk factors. "This allowed us to identify certain factors associated with significantly higher rates of bleeding," explains Herzig. "Our analysis revealed a number of independent risk factors that appeared to be associated with GI bleeds among non-ICU patients. These included being over age 60; being male; having liver disease, acute renal failure or sepsis; use of anticoagulant medication; preexisting clotting disorders; or being hospitalized on the internal medicine service.
The researchers then calculated the number of patients in each risk category that would need to be treated with acid-suppressive medication to prevent one GI bleed. "This allowed us to identify a small group of patients for whom the benefits of these medications seemed to outweigh the risks," says Herzig. "In the remaining patients, we determined that medication could be safely withheld."
While future studies will be needed to reproduce this data, adds Herzig, as a first step, the new scoring system will enable clinicians to identify the subset of patients who might benefit from prophylactic use of acid-suppressive medication, as well as a larger group for whom these medications might be safely avoided.
###
This study was funded, in part, by grant K24AG035075from the National Institute on Aging and grant 1 UL1 RR025758-01 from the National Center for Research Resources to support the Harvard Clinical and Translational Science Center.
Study coauthors include BIDMC investigators Edward R. Marcantonio, MD, SM (senior author), David B. Feinbloom, MD, Michael D. Howell, MD, MPH, Kalon K. L. Ho, MD, and Long H. Ngo, PhD; and Michael B. Rothberg, MD, MPH, of Baystate Medical Center and Tufts University School of Medicine.
BIDMC is a patient care, teaching and research affiliate of Harvard Medical School and currently ranks third in National Institutes of Health funding among independent hospitals nationwide. BIDMC is clinically affiliated with the Joslin Diabetes Center and is a research partner of the Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center. BIDMC is the official hospital of the Boston Red Sox. For more information, visit www.bidmc.org. END
Study provides guidance for use of acid-suppressive medications in hospital patients
Risk-scoring system could help manage costs and reduce potentially serious side effects
2013-01-07
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Psychological common ground could ease tensions among those with different religious beliefs
2013-01-07
Understanding how thoughts of mortality influence individuals' beliefs sheds light on the commonalities among different groups' motivations and could help ease tensions between opposing viewpoints, according to University of Missouri experiments that tested the relationship between awareness of death and belief in a higher power. The study found that thoughts of death increased atheists, Christians, Muslims and agnostics conviction in their own world views. For example, contrary to the wartime aphorism that there are no atheists in foxholes, thoughts of death did not cause ...
Cognitive deficits from concussions still present after 2 months
2013-01-07
EUGENE, Ore. -- (Jan. 7, 2013) -- The ability to focus and switch tasks readily amid distractions was compromised for up to two months following brain concussions suffered by high school athletes, according to a study at the University of Oregon.
Research team members, in an interview, said the discovery suggests that some athletes may need longer recovery periods than current practices dictate to lower the risk of subsequent concussions. Conventional wisdom, said lead author David Howell, a graduate student in the UO Department of Human Physiology, has typical recovery ...
Detrimental effect of obesity on lesions associated with Alzheimer's disease
2013-01-07
In France, more than 860,000 people suffer from Alzheimer's disease and related disorders, making them the largest cause of age-related loss of intellectual function. Cognitive impairments observed in Alzheimer's disease result from the accumulation of abnormal tau proteins in nerve cells undergoing degeneration . We know that obesity, a major risk factor in the development of insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes, increases the risk of dementia during the aging process. However, the effects of obesity on 'Taupathies' (i.e. tau protein-related disorders), including Alzheimer's ...
Penn study shows mountains are only minor contributors to erosion and climate regulation
2013-01-07
PHILADELPHIA — Though churning smokestacks, cud-chewing cows and gasoline-burning vehicles are contributing constantly to greenhouse gas emissions, there are also many processes that do the reverse, pulling molecules like carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere. One of these is chemical weathering, which occurs when rock turns into soil. Carbon dioxide molecules and rain combine to dissolve rock, and the weathering products, including sediment, eventually make their way through waterways to the ocean where some become trapped on the ocean bottom and in coral reefs and seashells.
For ...
A French nuclear exit?
2013-01-07
Los Angeles, CA (January 07, 2013). France has been held up, worldwide, as the forerunner in using nuclear fission to produce electricity. However, a third of the nation's nuclear reactors will need replacing in the next decade, and public opinion has shifted toward reducing reliance on nuclear power. In a special issue of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, published by SAGE four articles explore whether France has the means or desire to unplug from nuclear power.
Nuclear arms experts Patrice Bouveret, Bruno Barrillot, and Dominique Lalanne argue that phasing out ...
Timely reminders boost childhood immunizations rates
2013-01-07
AURORA, Colo. (Jan. 7, 2013) – New research from the Children's Outcomes Research Program at Children's Hospital Colorado shows that timely reminders by state or local health departments are more effective at increasing immunization rates among preschool children than those from primary care practices.
The study, published December 13 in the American Journal of Public Health, underscores the importance of partnerships between state and county health departments and primary care practices to keep children up-to-date on recommended vaccines.
"Immunizations provide ...
Racial essentialism reduces creative thinking, makes people more closed-minded
2013-01-07
New research suggests that racial stereotypes and creativity have more in common than we might think.
In an article published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, researcher Carmit Tadmor of Tel Aviv University and colleagues find that racial stereotyping and creative stagnation share a common mechanism: categorical thinking.
"Although these two concepts concern very different outcomes, they both occur when people fixate on existing category information and conventional mindsets," Tadmor and her colleagues write.
The researchers ...
New path to more efficient organic solar cells uncovered at Berkeley Lab's advanced light source
2013-01-07
Why are efficient and affordable solar cells so highly coveted? Volume. The amount of solar energy lighting up Earth's land mass every year is nearly 3,000 times the total amount of annual human energy use. But to compete with energy from fossil fuels, photovoltaic devices must convert sunlight to electricity with a certain measure of efficiency. For polymer-based organic photovoltaic cells, which are far less expensive to manufacture than silicon-based solar cells, scientists have long believed that the key to high efficiencies rests in the purity of the polymer/organic ...
How the kilogram has put on weight
2013-01-07
Post-Christmas and most of us are feeling the over-indulgence. But take heart - experts at Newcastle University, UK, have shown even the kilogram itself has put on weight. Using a state-of-the-art Theta-probe XPS machine – the only one of its kind in the world – the team have shown the original kilogram is likely to be tens of micrograms heavier than it was when the first standard was set in 1875.
And they say a suntan could be the key to helping it lose weight.
The original kilogram – known as the International Prototype Kilogram or the IPK – is the standard against ...
New antimatter method to provide 'a major experimental advantage'
2013-01-07
Researchers have proposed a method for cooling trapped antihydrogen which they believe could provide 'a major experimental advantage' and help to map the mysterious properties of antimatter that have to date remained elusive.
The new method, developed by a group of researchers from the USA and Canada, could potentially cool trapped antihydrogen atoms to temperatures 25 times colder than already achieved, making them much more stable and a lot easier to experiment on.
The suggested method, which has been published today, 7 January 2013, in IOP Publishing's Journal of ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Waterjet surgery for an enlarged prostate can offer relief, without compromising sexual enjoyment
Study uncovers link between childhood overweight and obesity and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in adulthood
IU professor helps pioneer groundbreaking light-driven method to create key drug compounds
Origin of life: How microbes laid the foundation for complex cells
How the brain links related memories formed close in time
Case study: Bartonella, babesia, found in brain tissue of child with seizures
“Concierge” screening for kidney transplant candidates leads to better outcomes, UNM researcher finds
New study sheds light on how bacteria ‘vaccinate’ themselves with genetic material from dormant viruses
Four advances that could change tuberculosis treatment
Obesity Action Coalition & The Obesity Society send letter to FDA on behalf of more than 20 leading organizations & providers urging enforcement of compounding regulations
New Microbiology Society policy briefing on Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) in wastewater
Transition point in romantic relationships signals the beginning of their end
Scientists witness living plant cells generate cellulose and form cell walls for the first time
Mount Sinai-led team identifies cellular mechanisms that may lead to onset of inflammatory bowel disease
SNU-GU researchers jointly develop a liquid robot capable of transformation, separation, and fusion like living cells
Climate warming and heatwaves accelerate global lake deoxygenation, study reveals
Unlocking dopamine’s hidden role: Protective modification of Tau revealed
New drug therapy combination shows promise for advanced melanoma patients
Nature’s warriors: How rice plants detect and defend against viral invaders
How the brain responds to prices: Scientists discover neural marker for price perception
Boosting brain’s waste removal system improves memory in old mice
New study sheds light on risks from residential heat and energy burdens in Miami
Racial and ethnic inequalities in actual vs nearest delivery hospitals
State earned income tax credits and firearm suicides
VR study reveals how pain and fear weaken sense of body ownership
Quantum leap: Graphene unlocks orbital hybridization
How black holes could nurture life
Dr. Amit Bar-Or, penn medicine neuroimmunologist, awarded the 2025 John Dystel prize for multiple sclerosis research
Recent study in mice provides key insights on the impact of excessive sucrose consumption in specific organs
A less toxic way to manufacture daily goods
[Press-News.org] Study provides guidance for use of acid-suppressive medications in hospital patientsRisk-scoring system could help manage costs and reduce potentially serious side effects