octreotide in the treatment of oesophageal varices
Last reviewed 01/2018
- synthetic analogue of somatostatin
- longer half-life than somatostatin - therefore can be given by bolus injection
rather than continuous infusion
- a meta-analysis has collated trials published in English in which somatostatin
or octreotide were compared with other vasoactive drugs (vasopressin or terlipressin),
slerotherapy or balloon tamponade - the pooled results showed that somatostatin
and octreotide were more effective than the other vasoactive drugs in the
initial control of acute bleeding but neither appeared to reduce mortality
rates (1)
- evidence shows that the combination of somatostatin or octreotide and endoscopic therapy is more effective than either alone in controlling an initial oesophageal variceal bleed (2)
Reference:
- 1) Gotzsche PC. Somatostatin or octreotide for acute bleeding oesophageal varices (Cochrane Review). In: The Cochrane Library, Issue 2, 2000. Oxford: Update Software.
- 2) Drug and Therapeutics Bulletin (2000), 38 (5), 37-40.