Thomas Jefferson University Hospital Philadelphia, PA
Nicholas Noverati, MD, MEd1, Ritu Nahar, MD1, Raina Shivashankar, MD1, Christina Tofani, MD1, Anthony Infantolino, MD1, Lillian Matthews, MD2 1Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, Philadelphia, PA; 2Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Philadelphia, PA
Introduction: Though gastrointestinal endoscopy is relatively safe, it may be complicated by post-procedure bleeding in the severely thrombocytopenic patient. International guidelines do not have a strong support for a specific platelet count necessary to safely perform gastrointestinal endoscopy, yet many institutions adhere to a pre-procedure goal of greater than 50,000/mL.
Methods: A systematic review was performed by searching PubMed, Scopus, Google Scholar and Cochrane Libraries. Adult patients undergoing gastrointestinal endoscopy with a pre-procedure platelet count < 100,000/mL were included. Patients with cirrhosis were excluded. Meta-analysis of post-procedure bleed events based on Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events grading was performed.
Results: Four studies were included from 449 unique citation results, providing data on 1,161 patients undergoing 1,557 procedures. Overall prevalence of all post-procedure bleeding was 83/1390 (6%) and 38/730 (5.2%) for post-biopsy bleeding. Grade 3 and 4 (< 50,000/mL) had higher odds of post-procedure bleeding compared to Grades 1 and 2 ( >50,000/mL) (OR 2.34, 1.35-4.05). There was no difference between Grade 3 (25-50,000/mL) and Grade 2 (50-75,000/mL) (OR 1.75, 0.93-3.29). There was also no difference among severity of thrombocytopenia and bleeding risk when post-biopsy data was isolated.
Discussion: Most low risk endoscopic procedures are likely safe in the severely thrombocytopenic patient, when considering bleed risk, and statistically significant bleeds only occur with counts less than 25,000/mL. Diagnostic endoscopy without intervention is likely safe at all platelet counts.
Disclosures:
Nicholas Noverati indicated no relevant financial relationships.
Ritu Nahar indicated no relevant financial relationships.
Christina Tofani indicated no relevant financial relationships.
Anthony Infantolino indicated no relevant financial relationships.
Lillian Matthews indicated no relevant financial relationships.
Nicholas Noverati, MD, MEd1, Ritu Nahar, MD1, Raina Shivashankar, MD1, Christina Tofani, MD1, Anthony Infantolino, MD1, Lillian Matthews, MD2. D0305 - Adverse Bleeding Events in Patients With Severe Thrombocytopenia Undergoing Endoscopy: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis, ACG 2022 Annual Scientific Meeting Abstracts. Charlotte, NC: American College of Gastroenterology.