Literature DB >> 11867109

Blood lactate as an early predictor of outcome in paracetamol-induced acute liver failure: a cohort study.

William Bernal1, Nora Donaldson, Duncan Wyncoll, Julia Wendon.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Although the King's College Hospital (KCH) selection criteria for emergency liver transplantation in paracetamol-induced acute liver failure are widely used, strategies to improve sensitivity and facilitate earlier transplantation are required. We investigated the use of arterial blood lactate measurement for the identification of transplantation candidates.
METHODS: In a single-centre study, we measured arterial blood lactate early (median 4 h) and after fluid resuscitation (median 12 h) in patients admitted to a tertiary-referral intensive-care unit. Threshold values that best identified individuals likely to die without transplantation were derived in a retrospective initial sample of 103 patients with paracetamol-induced acute liver failure and applied to a prospective validation sample of 107 patients. Predictive value and speed of identification were compared with those of KCH criteria.
FINDINGS: In the initial sample, median lactate was significantly higher in non-surviving patients than in survivors both in the early samples (8.5 [range 1.7--21.0] vs 1.4 [0.53--7.9] mmol/L, p<0.0001) and after fluid resuscitation (5.5 [1.3--18.6] vs 1.3 [0.26--3.2], p<0.0001). Applied to the validation sample, a threshold value of 3.5 mmol/L early after admission had sensitivity 67%, specificity 95%, positive likelihood ratio 13, and negative likelihood ratio 0.35; the corresponding values for a threshold of 3.0 mmol/L after fluid resuscitation were 76%, 97%, 30, and 0.24. Combined early and postresuscitation lactate concentrations had similar predictive ability to KCH criteria but identified non-surviving patients earlier (4 [3--13] vs 10 [3.5--19.5] h, p=0.01). Addition of postresuscitation lactate concentration to KCH criteria increased sensitivity from 76% to 91% and lowered negative likelihood ratio from 0.25 to 0.10.
INTERPRETATION: Arterial blood lactate measurement rapidly and accurately identifies patients who will die from paracetamol-induced acute liver failure. Its use could improve the speed and accuracy of selection of appropriate candidates for transplantation.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 11867109     DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(02)07743-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lancet        ISSN: 0140-6736            Impact factor:   79.321


  74 in total

1.  The effect of molecular adsorbent recirculating system on pathophysiological parameters in patients with acute liver failure.

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2.  Molecular adsorbent recirculating system dialysis in patients with acute liver failure who are assessed for liver transplantation.

Authors:  Christophe Camus; Sylvain Lavoué; Arnaud Gacouin; Yves Le Tulzo; Richard Lorho; Karim Boudjéma; Christian Jacquelinet; Rémi Thomas
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5.  Predicting daily outcomes in acetaminophen-induced acute liver failure patients with machine learning techniques.

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Review 8.  Etiology and management of fulminant hepatic failure.

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Review 9.  [Cholestasis and liver dysfunction in critical care patients].

Authors:  M Kredel; J Brederlau; N Roewer; C Wunder
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10.  Cell death serum biomarkers are early predictors for survival in severe septic patients with hepatic dysfunction.

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