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Introduction
Acute non-variceal upper GI hemorrhage (NVUGIH) is a common indication for hospitalization in the USA with a reported incidence of 66.7 cases per 100,000 [1]. Peptic ulcer disease, gastroduodenal erosions, Mallory–Weiss tears (MWT) and esophagitis are frequent causes of NVUGIH and account for more than 80% of cases. Other less common etiologies include Cameron ulcers, UGI cancers, angiodysplasia, polyps, gastric antral vascular ectasia (GAVE), and Dieulafoy’s lesions (DL).
Recurrent NVUGIH is common in high-risk patients and is associated with complications and increased mortality [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. The current standard of care is to treat patients with severe NVUGIH with endoscopic therapy based on visual stigmata of recent hemorrhage [SRH] [2,3,4]. These standard treatments include thermocoagulation (argon plasma coagulation [APC], multipolar electrocautery [MPEC]) and through-the-scope hemoclips [HC], either alone or in combination with epinephrine pre-injection [3, 9]. For NVUGIH, the goals of endoscopic treatment are to control active bleeding and prevent rebleeding by obliterating arterial blood flow underneath the SRH [10, 11]. However, rebleeding still occurs in up to 26% of high-risk patients with major SRH in peptic ulcers despite these therapies based on visual criteria [10]. Several promising techniques have emerged in the last decade which are important options for reducing rebleeding rates and improving clinical outcomes (Table 1). This review will present the scientific evidence for these novel strategies, including whether they result in definitive hemostasis, which is defined as successful endoscopic treatment of high-risk patients for control of active bleeding and prevention of rebleeding.
Doppler Endoscopic Probe
The Doppler endoscopic probe was first described in 1982 [12]. As a single-use endoscopic probe and device (DEP; Vascular Technology Inc, Nashua, NH), this is approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA). It does not provide direct hemostasis, but assists in lesion risk stratification by identifying underlying arterial blood flow, mapping its path, and guiding endoscopic hemostasis [10, 11]. This is especially useful in lesions with SRH and underlying arteries such as oozing bleeding, non-bleeding visible vessels and flat spots, whose characterization can be challenging and subjective compared to visual cues alone [11, 13]. In addition to risk stratification, DEP can also be used to confirm eradication of arterial blood flow after endoscopic therapy for definitive hemostasis in lesions with SRH [10, 11].
DEP is easy to use and to teach endoscopists how to apply [10, 11, 14]. The tip of the Doppler probe is lubricated and passed through the working channel of the diagnostic or therapeutic upper endoscope. It is then lightly applied to the SRH in a tangential orientation and then moved away from the SRH for 5–10 mm in a straight line [10, 11]. This is then repeated in four different quadrants to detect the direction of blood flow and location of the underlying vessel (Fig. 1) [10, 11]. While the use of Doppler has primarily been described in treating peptic ulcers, it can also be used for other focal non-variceal upper GI lesions with underlying arteries such as Dieulafoy’s lesions and Mallory–Weiss tears [10, 11, 15].
Advantages of the DEP system are its ability to guide risk stratification and validate risk of visual SRH, its low cost ($150-$200 USD), ease of use, and safety. Disadvantages include endoscopists needing to learn a new technique, possible variability among endoscopists in DEP signal interpretation, and nominal extra cost of disposable probes (Table 2).
Several cohort studies reported DEP as a promising tool for stratifying patients with focal lesions and SRH at high risk of rebleeding and improving rebleeding rates (Table 3). The outcomes reported in earlier studies are limited in current relevance by use of injection monotherapy (now regarded as less effective) and second look endoscopy (not routinely used and not recommended) [16,17,18,19]. However, a 2016 prospective cohort study examined the use of DEP in patients with severe peptic ulcer bleeding and reported that 27.4% of patients with major SRH (arterial spurting—Forrest 1A, non-bleeding visible vessel [NBVV]—Forrest 2A, and adherent clot—Forrest 2B) had residual arterial blood flow after modern, standard of care visually guided endoscopic treatment (MPEC or HC) [11]. The investigators additionally identified arterial blood flow underlying pigmented spots (Forrest 2C) in 40.5% of ulcer patients, which typically are not treated according to current guidelines [3, 9]. They later reported that rebleeding occurred in 20% of chronic ulcers with flat spots in patients treated medically [10]. The authors also concluded that DEP was more accurate than SRH alone to risk stratify ulcers for rebleeding at baseline and was useful as a guide for definitive endoscopic hemostasis of bleeding ulcers (Table 2, 3, 4, 5, 6).
A recent randomized clinical trial (RCT) supported the use of DEP in NVUGIH to improve clinical outcomes. This study compared standard visually guided therapy to DEP-guided treatment in 148 patients with severe NVUGIH (84.5% peptic ulcers, 12.8% DL and 2.7% bleeding MWT) [10]. The investigators reported a significantly lower rate of 30-day rebleeding among patients in the Doppler group (26.3% vs. 11.1%; p = 0.021) with a number needed to treat [NNT] of 7. By Kaplan–Meier analysis, there was a significant difference in time to lesion rebleeding (p = 0.017). There were also arithmetic lower rates of surgery, death, major complications, transfusions, and hospital days in the DEP group. This RCT also importantly identified that 89% of patients with residual post-treatment arterial blood flow ultimately rebled, as compared to 0% among patients with a positive post-treatment DEP that was further treated until negative (89.9% vs. 0.0%; p < 0.001). This finding corroborated earlier cohort studies which reported increased risk of rebleeding in patients with persistently positive post-treatment arterial blood flow in peptic ulcers [19, 20]. This study was included in a recent meta-analysis which found significantly lower rates of rebleeding [OR 0.13 (95% CI 0.04–0.44); P = 0.001], need for surgery [OR 0.05 (95% CI 0.01–0.24); P < 0.001], and bleeding associated mortality [OR 0.19 (95% CI 0.05–0.81); I = 0.00; P = 0.025] among 284 patients randomized to treatment with DEP versus conventional management [21].
As a corollary, persistent arterial blood flow under SRH usually causes rebleeding in high-risk patients with focal NVUGIH [10, 11]. These results emphasize that arterial blood flow underneath the SRH in focal lesions (such as ulcers and DL) is a major risk factor for lesion rebleeding. Obliteration of arterial blood flow underneath SRH prevents rebleeding [10, 11].
In addition to its promising effect on clinical outcomes, DEP has an excellent safety profile. In a meta-analysis of 526 patients enrolled in ten studies, no patients experienced any DEP-related adverse events [21]. DEP has also been shown to be cost effective when compared to conventional, visually guided therapy in acute peptic ulcer bleeding (PUB) in several different cost-analyses [22,23,24]. As one example, when used to direct treatment of ulcers with flat pigmented spots (Forrest 2C), DEP-guided therapy was more effective and less expensive than visually guided hemoclips over a 30 day time horizon [23].
OTSC
The large, over-the-scope clip (OTSC; Ovesco Endoscopy, Tuebingen, Germany) is a novel endoscopic clipping device that was first reported in 2007 in a case series which described its successful use in repair of gastrointestinal perforations and treatment of GI bleeding [25]. The OTSC applicator cap attaches to the tip of the endoscope similar to a band ligation device. There are multiple sizes ranging from 11 to 14 mm (depending on the size of endoscope that is being used) and also types of teeth (blunt and several sharp versions for various applications) (Fig. 2). OTSC was later described as a treatment for NVUGIH in retrospective and cohort studies and meta-analyses, with high rates of technical success and rebleeding rates ranging from 0 to 35% [26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34]. In addition to their retrospective design, these studies are limited by heterogeneity in terms of bleeding etiology, location, and therapeutic timing.
Advantages of OTSC include its ability to embed in and treat large or fibrotic ulcers due to its size and significant compression force; relatively infrequent complications; and modest cost ($400-$450 USD) (Fig. 3). Disadvantages include the need to remove the endoscope, attach the applicator cap (often to a smaller endoscope), and reintubate the patient prior to treatment; difficulty passing through luminal strictures, stenoses or the compressed upper esophageal sphincter area in intubated patients; and challenge in positioning and deploying the device, especially with tangential positions of the lesion or SRH (Table 2). Greater than 120 degree tip angulation in each quadrant is an important requirement with the endoscope to be able to access, target, and successfully deploy OTSC onto focal lesions such as ulcers or DL with SRH. There also is a learning curve for unfamiliar endoscopists utilizing this accessory, especially with emergencies.
There are a number of techniques that the endoscopist can employ to optimize OTSC use, especially when treating fibrotic ulcers. First, it is essential to center the SRH in the ulcer base in the cap of the OTSC. This is best achieved using a diagnostic endoscope with at least 120 degrees of tip control in all four turning quadrants, as described above. Second, the endoscopist should push the tip of the OTSC cap firmly against the ulcer base and maintain constant firm pressure, with the SRH in the center of the cap, while the clip is deployed. We recommend that the endoscopist maintain the position of the SRH within the cap (with firm pressure) while an assistant turns the wheel to deploy the clip. Lastly, selection of the correct OTSC device is important. The 11-mm- and 12-mm-diameter OTSC kits are preferred in patients with an endotracheal tube, as it can be difficult to intubate the esophagus with larger diameter OTSC. We also recommend using the OTSC with the 3-mm cap, as the OTSC systems with a longer cap can be more challenging to maintain in position centered over the SRH. While standardization is important, these techniques are best taught at the bedside by experts.
Because of its ability to grasp larger amounts of tissue than through-the-scope hemoclips and also fibrotic tissue with significant compression force, we hypothesized that OTSC would be more effective at treating NVUGI hemorrhage than standard endoscopic hemostasis techniques. For NVUGIH, rates of persistent arterial blood flow and rebleeding were monitored by DEP in a recent report [35]. The rates of residual blood flow after standard visually guided endoscopic hemostasis of major SRH were significantly higher than OTSC-treated lesions (24% vs 5%) and the rebleeding rates were also significantly higher (26% vs. 5%). As with DEP-guided hemostasis, successful obliteration of arterial blood flow with OTSC leads to definitive hemostasis of severe focal NVUGIH [10, 11, 35].
Prospective randomized reports on the use of OTSC are currently limited to two RCTs (Table 4). A recent study by the CURE Hemostasis group is the only prospective, randomized study describing the use of OTSC in the first line setting for treatment of severe upper GI hemorrhage [36]. This two center trial randomized 53 patients with either peptic ulcer disease (91%) or DL (9%) to treatment with OTSC or standard therapy (MPEC and/or HC, ± epinephrine pre-treatment of active bleeding or adherent clots) with subsequent management by physicians blinded to the endoscopic treatment. We reported a significantly lower rate of 30-day rebleeding in the OTSC arm when compared to the standard therapy arm (28.6% vs. 4%; p = 0.017) with a NNT of 4. All of the rebleeds occurred in patients with major stigmata of recent hemorrhage (active spurting or pulsatile arterial bleeding, NBVV, or adherent clot) and no patient with lesser stigmata (oozing or flat spot with positive arterial Doppler signal) rebled. Severe medical complications and post-treatment RBC transfusions were also significantly less frequent in the OTSC group when compared to the standard group [36].
The OTSC was also reported in an earlier trial (“STING”) that randomized 66 patients with recurrent peptic ulcer bleeding to either OTSC or standard therapy with epinephrine injection and/or through-the-scope clips as retreatment of peptic ulcer bleeds (PUBs) [37]. There were major methodologic differences from the CURE RCT because crossover was the design and patient care physicians were not blinded to the endoscopic treatments. The authors reported a composite primary outcome of “further bleeding,” which included persistent bleeding despite treatment or rebleeding within 7 days. Further bleeding occurred in 57.6% of patients in the standard therapy group compared to 15.2% in the OTSC group (p = 0.001). This was driven by rates of persistent bleeding despite initial re-treatment (42.4% vs. 6.0%; p = 0.001) more so than 7-day rebleeding (16.1% vs 9.1%; p = 0.468). A cost analysis based on the STING study results concluded that OTSC was cost effective in recurrent peptic ulcer bleeding, despite the increased cost of these clips [38].
TC-325
TC-325 (Hemospray, Cook Medical, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA) is a biologically inert powder that creates a mechanical barrier over bleeding sites when it comes in contact with aqueous solution. Its clinical GI use was first reported in a 2011 case series of 20 patients with peptic ulcer bleeding and it was approved by the US FDA for endoscopic hemostasis in 2018 [39]. Several international consensus statements support the use of TC-325 as temporizing therapy when experienced endoscopists are not available or other endoscopic modalities that are applied do not control active bleeding [6, 9].
The advantages of the TC-325 treatment are that it can be easily sprayed from a distance onto bleeding areas to slow or stop active bleeding.(Fig. 4) It does not require the level of expertise that is needed to identify, prepare, and effectively treat focal bleeding for definitive hemostasis with standard visually guided techniques of bleeding sites. TC-325 can also be used to treat diffuse mucosal or neoplasia bleeding. The major limitations of TC-325 as a topical agent are 1) that is sloughs off after a short time (usually < 24 h), 2) it does not prevent rebleeding nor result in definitive hemostasis of focal lesions with NVUGIH because arterial blood flow underneath SRH is not obliterated, 3) additional endoscopic treatments to prevent rebleeding by obliterating arterial blood flow are required to achieve permanent hemostasis and 4) each treatment is expensive ($2500 USD) (Table 2).
Several technical tips are important to remember when utilizing TC-325. First, it is important to take proactive measures to avoid catheter occlusion. This includes flushing the accessory channel with air prior to passing the catheter & avoiding direct contact between the catheter tip and pooled blood, mucosa, and the actively bleeding lesion. The endoscopist should avoid aspirating blood while the catheter is in the accessory channel because this can lead to occlusion. Second, the endoscopist should maintain the catheter tip at least 1-2 cm away from the SRH in order to allow adequate visualization of the lesion without blood touching the device. Finally, the endoscopist should “paint” the actively bleeding lesion with several layers of TC-325. Multiple applications can facilitate hemostasis if the first layer of powder is unsuccessful [40].
Prospective data regarding the use of TC-325 in NVUGIH are limited at this time to four prospective randomized trials and observational studies (Table 5). Only published as an abstract, the largest RCT to date included 224 patients with active non-variceal bleeding that were randomly assigned to TC-325 or standard treatment [41]. The most prevalent etiologies of bleeding were peptic ulcer disease (58%) and upper GI tumors (14.3%). Oozing bleeding (Forrest 1B) was much more prevalent than active arterial bleeding (Forrest 1A). In intention-to-treat analysis, the authors reported 30-day rebleeding-free probabilities of 89.8% in the TC-325 group and 81.1% in the standard treatment group. Patients in the standard treatment group were significantly more likely to fail initial attempts to control active bleeding (OR 3.88, 10.5–14.3). There were no significant differences in recurrent bleeding, death, or need for further interventions (endoscopic and/or angiographic). Among patients with bleeding ulcers (N = 130), rebleeding occurred in 12.5% in the TC-325 group and 15.4% in the standard treatment group (p = 0.612). The authors concluded that TC-325 was not inferior to standard endoscopic control of active bleeding from various non-variceal UGI lesions.
Several smaller randomized studies also compared TC-325 to standard endoscopic treatments. Bacarat et. al randomized 39 patients with active bleeding (84% oozing, 16% spurting) to first line treatment with TC-325 or standard hemoclips [42]. Peptic ulcer disease was the cause of bleeding in 44% of patients and other lesions included malignancy (13%), post-sphincterotomy bleeding (10%), Mallory-Weiss tear (8%) and Dieulafoy’s lesion (5%). There was no difference between the TC-325 and hemoclip group in terms of primary hemostasis (94.9% vs 90%; p = 0.487) and there was a nonsignificant trend toward increased rebleeding in the TC-325 group (27.9% vs. 15.8%; p = 0.572) at 1 week. There were no differences between the groups in rates of surgery, death, RBC transfusion or length of stay. Of the four patients with active bleeding from gastric tumors, none experienced rebleeding.
Another RCT examined the role of TC-325 in the management of tumor bleeding. The authors randomized 20 patients with acute bleeding from malignant tumors to either TC-325 or standard of care (thermal and/or injection therapies) [43]. Seventeen patients had bleeding in the upper GI tract. Immediate hemostasis was achieved in 90% of patients treated with TC-325 and 40% in the standard care arm (p = 0.057). Rebleeding at 30 days occurred in 20% and 60% in the TC-325 and standard care arms, respectively (p = NS). The results of this study were included in a recent meta-analysis (2 RCT, 2 prospective observational) which reported an overall tumor rebleeding rate of 21.9% [44]. This rate compares favorably to prior studies of other endoscopic modalities which found rates of immediate hemostasis as low as 40% and rebleeding in up to 30% [45, 46]. However, rebleeding of UGI and colon lesions with TC-325 as primary treatment remains high [47]. Such significant rebleeding requires definitive treatment with other endoscopic, angiographic, or surgical modalities.
A final prospective study used TC-325 in the treatment of high-risk peptic ulcers. The investigators randomized 20 patients with high-risk peptic ulcers (Forrest 1A, 2A, 2B) to standard treatment or TC-325 [48]. There was a nonsignificant trend towards increased rebleeding during second look endoscopy among those treated with TC-325 (33% vs. 10%; p = 0.582).
Other case series reported rebleeding rates of 10–19% when TC-325 was used as monotherapy for peptic ulcer bleeding (PUB) [39, 49]. A recent registry analysis including more than 200 patients with actively bleeding ulcers reported initial hemostasis in 88% and rebleeding in 17% of patients [50]. At this time, the available data suggests that TC-325 is best used in cases of either active bleeding that cannot be controlled by the endoscopist using standard therapies or in diffuse tumor bleeding, which is not amenable to standard thermal or mechanical treatments. For patients with active arterial bleeding from PUBs, DLs or other focal NVUGI lesions, as opposed to oozing bleeding, TC-325 appears to be only a temporizing measure because it does not obliterate underlying arterial blood flow in focal lesions such as peptic ulcers or Dieulafoy’s lesions [10, 11, 47]. Definitive hemostasis by experienced endoscopists is required to prevent rebleeding in such patients.
Conclusion
Severe non-variceal upper GI bleeding from focal lesions such as PUBs and DLs remains a common clinical problem. Rebleeding is common when major SRH are treated with standard, visually guided hemoclipping or thermal coagulation [10, 11, 15, 36]. Doppler endoscopic probe and over-the-scope clip are promising new techniques that can decrease rebleeding rates, especially in high-risk patients (Table 6). TC-325 appears to be useful as a temporizing measure for continued bleeding of NVUGIH when standard hemostasis fails or is not available by skilled endoscopists or for palliation of diffuse tumor bleeding until more definitive treatments can be administered. Residual arterial blood flow in focal NVUGIH after standard hemostasis or TC-325 is a major risk factor for recurrent bleeding. Additional randomized, controlled trials are warranted to better define the respective roles of these new endoscopic treatments in the management of severe bleeding and whether these are cost effective. Finally, didactic and hands-on training sessions are needed and highly recommended to teach trainees and clinicians when and how to utilize these new hemostasis techniques [36, 51].
Summary
-
Doppler endoscopic ultrasound (DEP), over-the-scope clip (OTSC), and TC-325 are promising new techniques for managing non-variceal upper-GI hemorrhage.
-
DEP is easy to use and assists in lesion risk stratification and targeted obliteration of SRH of focal NVUGI lesions with underlying arterial blood flow.
-
OTSC is useful for treating large or fibrotic ulcers to reduce rebleeding when compared to standard therapy, but training of endoscopists is needed.
-
TC-325 is useful for treating diffuse bleeding of tumors and achieving initial hemostasis of active bleeding when standard hemostasis fails. However, underlying arterial blood flow is not obliterated by this topical technique and rebleeding of NVUGIH is common.
-
Additional randomized clinical trial data is needed to better understand the clinical role for these novel endoscopic therapies.
-
Didactic instruction about the indications and limitations of these new techniques and hands-on training are also recommended for both GI trainees and GI clinicians prior to application in emergency EGDs.
Abbreviations
- APC:
-
Argon plasma coagulation
- DEP:
-
Doppler endoscopic probe
- DL:
-
Dieulafoy’s lesion
- FDA:
-
United States Food and Drug Administration
- GAVE:
-
Gastric antral vascular ectasia
- HC:
-
Hemoclip
- MPEC:
-
Multipolar electrocautery
- MWT:
-
Mallory—Weiss Tear
- NBVV:
-
Non-bleeding visible vessel
- NNT:
-
Number needed to treat
- NVUGIH:
-
Non-variceal upper GI hemorrhage
- OTSC:
-
Over-the-scope clip
- PUBs:
-
Peptic ulcer bleeds
- RCT:
-
Randomized clinical trial
- SRH:
-
Stigmata of recent hemorrhage
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Funding
Dr. Jensen and the CURE GI Hemostasis Research Unit studies were funded by NIH: NIDDK P30DK04301 CURE:DDRC (Human Studies Core), VA Clinical Merit Review Grants (CLIN-013-07F and 5I01CX001403) and the ASGE Research Foundation.
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Nulsen, B., Jensen, D.M. Hemostasis Techniques for Non-variceal Upper GI Hemorrhage: Beyond Injection and Cautery. Dig Dis Sci 67, 1431–1441 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10620-021-07034-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10620-021-07034-x