The Prognosis of Elderly Subjects with Oesophageal Varices
1989
: Discharge survival following variceal bleeding was similar in 27 elderly subjects, aged 65-93 years, and 125 younger subjects, aged under 65 (63% versus 70%, p greater than 0.05). Of 39 elderly subjects with varices which were not bleeding on admission, 82% were discharged alive but subsequent mortality was higher and long-term survival was similar (median 1 year) on life-table analysis. The overall long-term survival in the 66 elderly subjects was far worse than in the comparable group of 269 subjects under 65 (p less than 0.001). However, the excess deaths were from causes unrelated to hepatic failure or bleeding (e.g. stroke). Considering only deaths from hepatic failure or bleeding, long-term survival in the elderly and young was similar (p greater than 0.5). We conclude that elderly subjects with varices should be managed as actively as younger subjects since the majority are discharged alive and prolonged survival is common (25% at 3 years).
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