North vs south differences in acute peptic ulcer hemorrhage in Croatia: Hospitalization incidence trends, clinical features, and 30-day case fatality

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Abstract

Aim To assess the seven-year trends of hospitalization incidence due to acute peptic ulcer hemorrhage (APUH) and associated risk factors, and examine the differences in these trends between two regions in Croatia. Methods The study collected sociodemographic, clinical, and endoscopic data on 2204 patients with endoscopically confirmed APUH who were admitted to the Clinical Hospital Center "Sestre Milosrdnice," Zagreb and Clinical Hospital Center Split between January 1, 2005 and December 31, 2011. We determined hospitalization incidence rates, 30-day case fatality rate, clinical outcomes, and incidenceassociated factors. Results No differences were observed in APUH hospitalization incidence rates between the regions. Age-standardized one-year cumulative APUH hospitalization incidence rate calculated using the European Standard Population was significantly higher in Zagreb than in Split region (43.2/100 000 vs 29.2/100,000). A significantly higher APUH hospitalization incidence rates were observed in the above 65 years age group. Overall 30-day case fatality rate was 4.9%. Conclusion The hospitalization incidence of APUH in two populations did not change over the observational period and it was significantly higher in the Zagreb region. The incidence of acute duodenal ulcer hemorrhage also remained unchanged, whereas the incidence of acute gastric ulcer hemorrhage increased. The results of this study allow us to monitor epidemiological indicators of APUH and compare data with other countries.

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Ljubičić, N., Pavić, T., Budimir, I., Puljiz, Ž., Bišcanin, A., Bratanić, A., … Troskot, B. (2014). North vs south differences in acute peptic ulcer hemorrhage in Croatia: Hospitalization incidence trends, clinical features, and 30-day case fatality. Croatian Medical Journal, 55(6), 647–654. https://doi.org/10.3325/cmj.2014.55.647

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