Nora Mattek
Technion – Israel Institute of Technology
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Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 2008
Brintha K. Enestvedt; Ian M. Gralnek; Nora Mattek; David A. Lieberman; Glenn Eisen
BACKGROUNDnThe majority of studies on upper-GI hemorrhage (UGIH) to date have been based on clinical experience at academic centers. There is limited information about patients with UGIH who are evaluated by endoscopy at nonacademic settings, which comprise the majority of endoscopic practices in the United States.nnnOBJECTIVEnThe aims of this retrospective study were to use a large national endoscopy database to describe the population of patients who received an EGD for nonvariceal upper-GI hemorrhage at diverse clinical practice sites and to characterize their endoscopic diagnoses.nnnMETHODSnBetween 2000 and 2004, the Clinical Outcomes Research Initiative (CORI) database received endoscopic reports from 72 diverse practice sites in the United States. All adult patients who underwent an EGD during this period at a CORI site for the indications of hematemesis, melena, or suspected upper-GI bleed were identified. Variceal bleeding was excluded. The nonvariceal UGIH cohort was described, and this groups endoscopic findings were characterized by the prevalence, indication, and location of an EGD (inpatient vs outpatient). A repeat EGD within a 2-week period was also evaluated.nnnRESULTSnA total of 243,427 EGDs were performed during the study period; 12,392 (4.9% of all EGDs) were performed for evaluation of hematemesis, melena, or suspected upper-GI bleed. Patients in this cohort were more likely to be older, men, and nonwhite compared with their nonbleeding counterparts. Melena was the most common indication for an EGD. The most common endoscopic finding was an ulcer (32.7%), followed by erosion (18.8%). A normal EGD was reported on 17.2% of EGDs. Among patients with ulcers, gastric ulcers were more common that duodenal ulcers (54.4% vs 37.1%), whereas clean-based ulcers comprised 52% of all ulcers. Ulcers and Mallory-Weiss tears were significantly more common on inpatient procedures. Ulcers identified on outpatient EGDs were more likely to be clean based. A repeat endoscopy was performed on 4% of the cohort within a 2-week follow-up period, hematemesis was the most common indication for a repeat EGD, and 24.3% of the cohort had a documented therapeutic intervention on their initial EGD. Among inpatients, 6.0% had a repeat EGD within two weeks for an UGIH indication compared with only 1.4% of outpatients (P < .0001).nnnCONCLUSIONSnThese results allow association of EGD findings with patient presentation. Furthermore, it allows us to characterize endoscopic findings in a particular patient population (those patients with UGIH) in clinical practice, outside of traditional academic medical centers. The CORI database is a valuable resource for characterizing the epidemiology of endoscopic findings and, in particular, patient populations and across diverse practice settings, thus, enabling the development of hypotheses for future studies.
/data/revues/00165107/v63i5/S0016510706010480/ | 2011
Adam E. Silverblatt; Leann Michaels; Nora Mattek; Glenn Eisen; David Lieberman
/data/revues/00165107/v63i5/S001651070600962X/ | 2011
Brintha K. Enestvedt; Glenn Eisen; Nora Mattek; Ian M. Gralnek; David Lieberman
/data/revues/00165107/v63i5/S0016510706009448/ | 2011
Prathiba N. Doddabasappa; Uday Shankar; Nora Mattek; Glenn Eisen; David Lieberman; P.R. Gowdar
/data/revues/00165107/v63i5/S0016510706009229/ | 2011
Jennifer Urquhart; Douglas O. Faigel; Nora Mattek; Jennifer L. Holub; David Lieberman; Glenn Eisen
/data/revues/00165107/v63i5/S001651070600914X/ | 2011
Brintha K. Enestvedt; Glenn Eisen; Nora Mattek; Ian M. Gralnek; David Lieberman
/data/revues/00165107/v63i5/S0016510706008212/ | 2011
Sarah A. Rodriguez; Nora Mattek; Brian Fennerty; David Lieberman; Glenn Eisen
/data/revues/00165107/v61i5/S001651070500859X/ | 2011
Mary Kovalak; Jeremy Lake; Nora Mattek; David Lieberman; Glenn Eisen; Atif Zaman
Archive | 2010
Joel H. Rubenstein; Nora Mattek; Glenn M. Eisen
Archive | 2008
Sameer D. Saini; Glenn M. Eisen; Nora Mattek; Philip Schoenfeld