Index
Module 14 • Preventive Care
Supportive & Preventive Medicine
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Data Tables
Supportive & Preventive Medicine
Megan Feeney ~3 min read Module 14 of 20
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Supportive and Preventive Medicine

4
In 2016, the Surviving Sepsis guidelines recommended PPIs or H2RAs in patients at risk (Crit Care Med

2017;45:486-552).

5

The 2020 clinical practice guideline for gastrointestinal bleeding prophylaxis for critically ill patients

recommended SUP with a gastrointestinal bleeding risk of at least 4% based on several well-studied

risk factors. The guidelines made a weak recommendation for PPIs over H2RAs, with both PPIs and

H2RAs as strongly preferred to sucralfate. (BMJ 2020;368:l6722).

6
The 2024 Society of Critical Care Medicine and American Society of Health-System Pharmacists

guideline for the prevention of stress-related GI bleeding in critically ill adults suggests that

coagulopathy, shock, or chronic liver disease should be considered risk factors for clinically important

upper GI bleeds. These patients should receive SUP compared with no SUP using either PPIs or H2RAs

as first-line agents (Crit Care Med. 2024;52(8):e421-e430).

Patients with other risk factors (ie, critically ill but absence of coagulopathy, shock, or chronic liver

disease) may be considered at low risk of clinically important stress-related GI bleeding.

Contrary to past guidelines, mechanical ventilation alone is found not likely to be a risk factor and

does not necessitate SUP.

Patient Case

Questions 2–4 pertain to the following case.

A 45-year-old woman is admitted to the ICU for severe respiratory failure from community-acquired pneumo-

nia. She is endotracheally intubated and placed on mechanical ventilation. An NGT is placed to begin enteral

nutrition. Three days later, she is receiving norepinephrine and vasopressin infusions and appropriate antimicro-

bial agents. Her WBC is 20 x 103 cells/mm3, Plt 45,000/mm3, BUN 70 mg/dL, SCr 4.5 mg/dL (baseline 0.9 mg/

dL), K 4.5 mEq/L, INR 1.4, AST 30 IU/mL, and ALT 46 IU/mL.

2Which best reflects this patient’s risk factors for stress-related bleeding?
A.Coagulopathy.
B.Coagulopathy and shock.
C.Mechanical ventilation, coagulopathy, acute kidney injury, and shock.
D.Mechanical ventilation, coagulopathy, acute kidney injury, shock, and enteral nutrition.
3

Which would be most appropriate for preventing stress-related bleeding?

A.Sucralfate 1 g four times daily by NGT.
B.Magnesium hydroxide 30 mL every 4 hours by NGT.
C.Pantoprazole 40 mg intravenously twice daily.
D.Famotidine 20 mg intravenously daily.
4

One week later, the patient’s respiratory status has greatly improved. She has been off sedation and vaso-

pressors for the past 4 days, working with physical therapy, and is now extubated. Her only medications

include ceftriaxone, heparin subcutaneously, and SUP. Her current laboratory values are as follows: WBC 6

x 103 cells/mm3, Plt 256,000/mm3, BUN 10 mg/dL, SCr 1.1 mg/dL, K 4.0 mEq/L, INR 0.8, AST 15 IU/mL,

and ALT 10 IU/mL. Which would be the most appropriate recommendation regarding this patient’s SUP

regimen?

A.SUP should be continued until hospital discharge.
B.SUP should be continued until ICU discharge.
C.SUP should be discontinued now.
D.SUP should be discontinued once the patient is off antimicrobials.
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