Indications for OGD

OGD is one of the most commonly requested gastro procedures in the NHS.

It is:

  • Very useful
  • But invasive
  • Limited capacity

So the key skill is knowing:

Who needs urgent scope,
who needs routine scope,
and who doesn’t need one at all.

This guide focuses on safe, practical decision-making for junior doctors.


First principle

Before requesting OGD, ask:

Will the result change management?

If not → don’t scope.

OGD is not a reassurance test.


🚨 URGENT / SAME-DAY OGD (on-call or inpatient)

These patients need immediate or early inpatient endoscopy.

Do not delay.


🔴 Upper GI bleeding (most common indication)

  • Haematemesis
  • Coffee-ground vomit
  • Melaena
  • Hb drop with suspected GI source

Because:

  • Needs diagnosis + therapy (clips/banding/injection)

👉 Refer urgently

This is the bread-and-butter emergency for OGD.


🔴 Suspected variceal bleed

  • Known cirrhosis + bleeding

Because:

  • Needs banding
  • High mortality

👉 Urgent scope

Never sit on these patients.


🔴 Suspected cholangitis needing ERCP (not OGD but related pathway)

  • Fever + jaundice + obstruction

👉 urgent endoscopic intervention


🔴 Food bolus obstruction

  • Can’t swallow saliva
  • Acute dysphagia

Because:

  • Risk of aspiration
  • Needs removal

👉 urgent endoscopy


🔴 Caustic ingestion / severe oesophageal injury

Needs early assessment.


⚠️ INPATIENT / EARLY OGD (within admission or 2–4 weeks)

Not crashing, but shouldn’t wait months.


🟡 Dysphagia (very important)

Any new dysphagia:

  • Solids or liquids
  • Progressive

Think cancer until proven otherwise.

👉 2-week wait / urgent OGD

Never label as reflux without scope.


🟡 Iron deficiency anaemia (IDA)

Especially:

  • Males
  • Postmenopausal women

Because:

  • Need to exclude upper GI malignancy/ulcer

👉 OGD ± colonoscopy

Very common real-life referral.


🟡 Weight loss + upper GI symptoms

Red flag.


🟡 Persistent vomiting

To exclude obstruction/ulcer.


🟡 Suspected gastric outlet obstruction

Early satiety, vomiting, distension.


🟡 Suspected malignancy

  • Anaemia
  • Dyspepsia with red flags
  • Palpable mass

👉 urgent pathway


ROUTINE / OUTPATIENT OGD

Appropriate but not urgent.


🟢 Persistent dyspepsia despite treatment

After:

  • PPI trial
  • H. pylori testing

If still symptomatic → routine OGD reasonable


🟢 Chronic reflux with alarm features or poor response


🟢 Surveillance

  • Barrett’s oesophagus
  • Varices
  • Previous ulcers
  • Post-cancer follow-up

Planned scopes, not urgent.


Usually NO OGD needed

Very common over-referrals.


❌ Simple dyspepsia (<55, no red flags)

Treat first:

  • PPI
  • H. pylori

No immediate scope needed


❌ Known reflux responding to treatment


❌ Mild gastritis symptoms only


❌ “Just to check everything is normal”

Not a reason


Red flags that should trigger urgent thinking

If ANY present → escalate urgency:

  • Dysphagia
  • Weight loss
  • Anaemia
  • GI bleeding
  • Persistent vomiting
  • Age >55 with new symptoms
  • Family history cancer
  • Palpable mass

These are cancer-pathway symptoms until proven otherwise.


Simple ward decision rule

When thinking about OGD:

Ask:

  1. Is there bleeding? → urgent
  2. Is there obstruction/dysphagia? → urgent
  3. Is there anaemia/weight loss/red flag? → early
  4. Just dyspepsia? → treat first

This covers 90% of cases.


How to make a good OGD referral (important)

Include:

  • Indication clearly
  • Hb
  • Observations
  • Anticoagulation status
  • Comorbidities
  • Stability

Instead of:
❌ “Please scope”

Say:
✔ “Melaena, Hb dropped 40, stable after fluids – query UGIB”

Clear referrals get faster scopes.


Common junior mistakes

  • Scoping simple dyspepsia
  • Missing dysphagia red flag
  • Not referring UGIB early
  • Forgetting IDA needs scope
  • Using OGD for reassurance only

Remember:
OGD is for diagnosis that changes management.


Take-home concept

Scope bleeding and red flags urgently.
Scope persistent or concerning symptoms routinely.
Don’t scope simple dyspepsia.