The study examines, whether the use of the HemoPill Acute ® capsule in case of suspected nonvariceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding can identify cases in which endoscopy can be delayed to 48-96 hours without risk to the patient.
Despite a variety of scoring systems (Glasgow-Blatchford-Score, etc.) timing of endoscopy in case of suspecting nonvariceal bleeding in the upper gastrointestinal tract is still challenging. While very early endoscopy (within 12 hours) is required in some cases, European Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ESGE) - guidelines recommend performing emergency endoscopy within 24 hours in other cases. However, a recent study (Siau et al. 2019) showed that even this time window is only kept in 59% of cases. Therefore this study examines, whether the use of the HemoPill Acute ® capsule in case of suspected nonvariceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding, can identify cases in which endoscopy can be delayed to 48-96 hours without risk to the patient. In this study, after the routine administration of a proton pump inhibitor, hemodynamically stable emergency patients suspected of having non-variceal bleeding in the upper gastrointestinal tract receive a novel blood detection capsule (HemoPill Acute ®) for swallowing, whose result is available after 2 hours. In case of blood detection in the upper gi-tract (capsule positive), the endoscopy will be performed within 12 hours. If no blood is found in the upper GI tract (capsule negative), endoscopy will be performed after 48 to 96 hours, with the patient being monitored in hospital until then. In these cases, if clinical bleeding occurs before the planned endoscopy, the patient will receive an unscheduled emergency endoscopy. Further treatment is carried out according to current clinical standards. 30 days after discharge, the patients will be asked by telephone about their further clinical course and possible complications. The study is planned to recruit 72 participants over 48 months in several centers. If this procedure is found to be safe, the HemoPill Acute ® capsule can be used to reduce the number of emergency endoscopies.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
73
Capsule positive: Endoscopy endoscopy will be performed within 12 hours. Capsule negative: Endoscopy will be performed after 48 to 96 hours.
Klinikum Friedrichshain
Berlin, Germany
Universitästklinik Freiburg
Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany
Sana Klinikum Offenbach GmbH
Offenbach, Germany
Universitätsklinik Würzburg
Würzburg, Germany
Rate of avoided emergency endoscopies (usually done within 24 hours) in case of negative HemoPill.
In how many cases with a negative HaemoPill, the endoscopy interval can be extended to at least 48 hours without acute re-bleeding (confirmed in unscheduled emergency endoscopy) occurring in the meantime. The criteria for suspected re-bleeding (leading to an unscheduled emergency endoscopy) are: Hematemesis, again melena or hematochezia after normalized stool, tachycardia (≥110 / min) or hypotension (RRsys ≤90 mm Hg) without other explanation, decrease in the Hb value ≥2 g/dl in the course without other explanation (e.g. dilution, nosebleeds ), no increase in Hb after transfusion of erythrocyte concentrate (s) (measured after 24 hours).
Time frame: 48 to 96 hours after swallow the capsule
Rate of true positive HemoPill results leading to an emergency endoscopic intervention
HemoPill positive and emergency endoscopy with active bleeding / bleeding source
Time frame: 12 hours after swallow the capsule
Rate of false positive HemoPill results
HemoPill positive and emergency endoscopy without active bleeding / bleeding source
Time frame: 12 hours after swallow the capsule
Rate of false negative HemoPill results
HemoPill negative and clinical signs of bleeding and confirmation in unscheduled emergency endoscopy
Time frame: 48 to 96 hours after swallow the capsule
The use of the HemoPill Acute ® capsule as part of emergency care is safe and technically easy.
Measurement of procedural complications
Time frame: 30 Days after discharge
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.