Colorectal Disease, volume 25, issue 11, pages 2206-2216

Early feeding reduces length of hospital stay in patients with acute lower gastrointestinal bleeding: A large multicentre cohort study

Takaaki Kishino 1
Tomonori Aoki 2
Eiji Sadashima 3
Katsumasa Kobayashi 4
Atsushi Yamauchi 5
Atsuo Yamada 2
Jun Omori 6
Takashi Ikeya 7
Taiki Aoyama 8
Naoyuki Tominaga 9
Yoshinori Sato 10
Naoki Ishii 11
Tsunaki Sawada 12
Masaki Murata 13
Akinari Takao 14
Kazuhiro Mizukami 15
Ken Kinjo 16
Shunji Fujimori 17
Takahiro Uotani 18
Minoru Fujita 19
Hiroki SATO 20
Sho Suzuki 21
Toshiaki Narasaka 22
Junnosuke Hayasaka 23
Tomohiro Funabiki 24
Yuzuru Kinjo 25
Akira Mizuki 26
Shu Kiyotoki 27
Tatsuya Mikami 28
Ryosuke Gushima 29
Hiroyuki FUJII 30
Yuta Fuyuno 31
Naohiko Gunji 32
Yosuke Toya 33
Kazuyuki Narimatsu 34
Noriaki Manabe 35
Koji Nagaike 36
Tetsu Kinjo 37
Yorinobu Sumida 38
Sadahiro Funakoshi 39
Kiyonori Kobayashi 40
Tamotsu Matsuhashi 41
Yuga Komaki 42
Mitsuru Kaise 6
Naoyoshi Nagata 43, 44
Show full list: 45 authors
1
 
Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Centre for Digestive and Liver Diseases Nara City Hospital Nara Japan
3
 
Department of Medical Research Institute Saga‐Ken Medical Centre Koseikan Saga Japan
4
 
Department of Gastroenterology Tokyo Metropolitan Bokutoh Hospital Tokyo Japan
8
 
Department of Gastroenterology Hiroshima City Asa Citizens Hospital Hiroshima Japan
9
 
Department of Gastroenterology Saga Medical Centre Koseikan Saga Japan
11
 
Department of Gastroenterology Tokyo Shinagawa Hospital Tokyo Japan
18
 
Department of Gastroenterology Japanese Red Cross Shizuoka Hospital Shizuoka Japan
24
 
Emergency and Critical Care Centre, Saiseikai Yokohama Tobu Hospital Kanagawa Japan
25
 
Department of Gastroenterology, Naha City Hospital Okinawa Japan
26
 
Department of Internal Medicine Tokyo Saiseikai Central Hospital Tokyo Japan
27
 
Department of Gastroenterology Shuto General Hospital Yamaguchi Japan
30
 
Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology National Hospital Organization Fukuokahigashi Medical Centre Fukuoka Japan
36
 
Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Suita Municipal Hospital Osaka Japan
38
 
Department of Gastroenterology National Hospital Organization Kyushu Medical Centre Fukuoka Japan
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2023-10-03
scimago Q1
SJR1.164
CiteScore6.1
Impact factor2.9
ISSN14628910, 14631318
Gastroenterology
Abstract
Aim

No studies have compared the clinical outcomes of early and delayed feeding in patients with acute lower gastrointestinal bleeding (ALGIB). This study aimed to evaluate the benefits and risks of early feeding in a nationwide cohort of patients with ALGIB in whom haemostasis was achieved.

Methods

We reviewed data for 5910 patients with ALGIB in whom haemostasis was achieved and feeding was resumed within 3 days after colonoscopy at 49 hospitals across Japan (CODE BLUE‐J Study). Patients were divided into an early feeding group (≤1 day, n = 3324) and a delayed feeding group (2–3 days, n = 2586). Clinical outcomes were compared between the groups by propensity matching analysis of 1508 pairs.

Results

There was no significant difference between the early and delayed feeding groups in the rebleeding rate within 7 days after colonoscopy (9.4% vs. 8.0%; p = 0.196) or in the rebleeding rate within 30 days (11.4% vs. 11.5%; p = 0.909). There was also no significant between‐group difference in the need for interventional radiology or surgery or in mortality. However, the median length of hospital stay after colonoscopy was significantly shorter in the early feeding group (5 vs. 7 days; p < 0.001). These results were unchanged when subgroups of presumptive and definitive colonic diverticular bleeding were compared.

Conclusion

The findings of this nationwide study suggest that early feeding after haemostasis can shorten the hospital stay in patients with ALGIB without increasing the risk of rebleeding.

Found 
Found 

Top-30

Journals

1
1

Publishers

1
1
  • We do not take into account publications without a DOI.
  • Statistics recalculated only for publications connected to researchers, organizations and labs registered on the platform.
  • Statistics recalculated weekly.

Are you a researcher?

Create a profile to get free access to personal recommendations for colleagues and new articles.
Share
Cite this
GOST | RIS | BibTex | MLA
Found error?