| Literature DB >> 25877702 |
Thierry Gustot1, Javier Fernandez2, Elisabet Garcia3, Filippo Morando4, Paolo Caraceni5, Carlo Alessandria6, Wim Laleman7, Jonel Trebicka8, Laure Elkrief9, Corinna Hopf10, Pablo Solís-Munoz11, Faouzi Saliba12, Stefan Zeuzem13, Augustin Albillos14, Daniel Benten15, José Luis Montero-Alvarez16, Maria Teresa Chivas17, Mar Concepción18, Juan Córdoba19, Aiden McCormick20, Rudolf Stauber21, Wolfgang Vogel22, Andrea de Gottardi23, Tania M Welzel13, Marco Domenicali5, Alessandro Risso6, Julia Wendon11, Carme Deulofeu3, Paolo Angeli4, François Durand9, Marco Pavesi3, Alexander Gerbes10, Rajiv Jalan24, Richard Moreau9, Pere Ginés2, Mauro Bernardi25, Vicente Arroyo25.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) is characterized by acute decompensation (AD) of cirrhosis, organ failure(s), and high 28-day mortality. We investigated whether assessments of patients at specific time points predicted their need for liver transplantation (LT) or the potential futility of their care. We assessed clinical courses of 388 patients who had ACLF at enrollment, from February through September 2011, or during early (28-day) follow-up of the prospective multicenter European Chronic Liver Failure (CLIF) ACLF in Cirrhosis study. We assessed ACLF grades at different time points to define disease resolution, improvement, worsening, or steady or fluctuating course. ACLF resolved or improved in 49.2%, had a steady or fluctuating course in 30.4%, and worsened in 20.4%. The 28-day transplant-free mortality was low-to-moderate (6%-18%) in patients with nonsevere early course (final no ACLF or ACLF-1) and high-to-very high (42%-92%) in those with severe early course (final ACLF-2 or -3) independently of initial grades. Independent predictors of course severity were CLIF Consortium ACLF score (CLIF-C ACLFs) and presence of liver failure (total bilirubin ≥12 mg/dL) at ACLF diagnosis. Eighty-one percent had their final ACLF grade at 1 week, resulting in accurate prediction of short- (28-day) and mid-term (90-day) mortality by ACLF grade at 3-7 days. Among patients that underwent early LT, 75% survived for at least 1 year. Among patients with ≥4 organ failures, or CLIF-C ACLFs >64 at days 3-7 days, and did not undergo LT, mortality was 100% by 28 days.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25877702 DOI: 10.1002/hep.27849
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hepatology ISSN: 0270-9139 Impact factor: 17.425