Upper gastrointestinal bleeding (UGIB) is a common and potentially lethal medical emergency, which requires hospitalization and healthcare resources. Despite the changing epidemiology and advancement of endoscopic therapy in the recent decade, the all-cause mortality of UGIB remains high (\>2%). An accurate risk stratification is necessary to triage patients into low- or high-risk groups, in order to inform clinicians for the necessity and timing of urgent endoscopy. However, existing pre-endoscopy risk scores, such as the Glasgow-Blatchford score (GBS), Rockall score and AIMS65 score, are suboptimal in predicting relevant clinical outcomes. An alternative strategy for risk stratification is urgently warranted in patients with UGIB to guide the next step of management. In a pre-clinical study, the sensitivity and specificity of HemoPill® prototype were 95% and 87.5% respectively, when the sensors were positioned close to the bleeding point. Furthermore, several human clinical studies have proven the feasibility and accuracy of HemoPill® in healthy volunteers and patients with suspected UGIB. Capsule ingestion was well tolerated with no device-related adverse event or capsule retention. All patients with negative HI were found to have no active endoscopic bleeding (true negative, 100%, 17/17). In patients with bleeding \>20ml, true positive HI signals were detected (100%, 2/2) In a retrospective multi-center study, 61 patients with suspected UGIB were recruited to use HemoPill®. Among the capsule-positive cases, subsequent endoscopy confirmed active bleeding in 57% (20/35) of them. None of the capsule-negative patients rebled (0%, 0/25), which prevented unnecessary emergent endoscopy in 72% of them (18/25).
From December 2023 to February 2024, the investigator conducted a pilot study and screened 51 adult subjects with symptoms and signs of suspected UGIB in Prince of Wales Hospital. Among them, the investigator recruited 20 eligible subjects to receive HemoPill® examination before oesophago-gastro-duodenoscopy (OGD). The overall sensitivity was 80% with a negative predictive value of 87.5%. The area-under-receiver-operating-characteristic curve was 0.633. The pilot data demonstrated a huge potential for this novel, non-invasive, easy-to-use device as UGIB screening in the real-world. A large-scale, prospective validation study will be conducted to evaluate the diagnostic performance of the new generation HemoPill® acute capsule in UGIB.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
193
Presence of active bleeding
Presence of active bleeding, old blood or potential bleeding sources during OGD examination, which warrants endoscopic haemostatic treatment.
Time frame: during OGD examination
Technical success rate
Technical success rate
Time frame: during OGD examination
Adverse event rate
Adverse event rate
Time frame: 30days post study procedure
Capsule retention rate
Capsule retention rate
Time frame: 30days post study procedure
Time from Hemopill acute capsule ingestion to a positive HI signal
Time from Hemopill acute capsule ingestion to a positive HI signal
Time frame: during OGD examination
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