Author:
Ishii Naoki,Nagata Naoyoshi,Kobayashi Katsumasa,Yamauchi Atsushi,Yamada Atsuo,Omori Jun,Ikeya Takashi,Aoyama Taiki,Tominaga Naoyuki,Sato Yoshinori,Kishino Takaaki,Sawada Tsunaki,Murata Masaki,Takao Akinari,Mizukami Kazuhiro,Kinjo Ken,Fujimori Shunji,Uotani Takahiro,Fujita Minoru,Sato Hiroki,Suzuki Sho,Narasaka Toshiaki,Hayasaka Junnosuke,Funabiki Tomohiro,Kinjo Yuzuru,Mizuki Akira,Kiyotoki Shu,Mikami Tatsuya,Gushima Ryosuke,Fujii Hiroyuki,Fuyuno Yuta,Gunji Naohiko,Toya Yosuke,Narimatsu Kazuyuki,Manabe Noriaki,Nagaike Koji,Kinjo Tetsu,Sumida Yorinobu,Funakoshi Sadahiro,Kawagishi Kana,Matsuhashi Tamotsu,Komaki Yuga,Miki Kuniko,Watanabe Kazuhiro,Omata Fumio,Shiratori Yasutoshi,Imamura Noriatsu,Yano Takahiko,Kaise Mitsuru
Abstract
AbstractOutcomes of acute lower gastrointestinal bleeding have not been compared according to hospital capacity. We aimed to perform a propensity score-matched cohort study with path and mediation analyses for acute hematochezia patients. Hospitals were divided into high- versus low-volume hospitals for emergency medical services. Rebleeding and death within 30 days were compared. Computed tomography, early colonoscopy (colonoscopy performed within 24 h), and endoscopic therapies were included as mediators. A total of 2644 matched pairs were yielded. The rebleeding rate within 30 days was not significant between high- and low-volume hospitals (16% vs. 17%, P = 0.44). The mortality rate within 30 days was significantly higher in the high-volume cohort than in the low-volume cohort (1.7% vs. 0.8%, P = 0.003). Treatment at high-volume hospitals was not a significant factor for rebleeding (odds ratio [OR] = 0.91; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.79–1.06; P = 0.23), but was significant for death within 30 days (OR = 2.03; 95% CI, 1.17–3.52; P = 0.012) on multivariate logistic regression after adjusting for patients’ characteristics. Mediation effects were not observed, except for rebleeding within 30 days in high-volume hospitals through early colonoscopy. However, the direct effect of high-volume hospitals on rebleeding was not significant. High-volume hospitals did not improve the outcomes of acute hematochezia patients.
Funder
The Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare
JSPS KAKENHI Grant
Smoking Research Foundation, Takeda Science Foundation, Grants-in-Aid for Research from the National Center for Global Health and Medicine
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC