Literature DB >> 25976762

Time-varying impact of comorbidities on mortality after liver transplantation: a national cohort study using linked clinical and administrative data.

Chutwichai Tovikkai1, Susan C Charman2, Raaj K Praseedom3, Alexander E Gimson4, Jan van der Meulen2.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: We assessed the impact of comorbidity on mortality in three periods after liver transplantation (first 90 days, 90 days-5 years and 5-10 years).
DESIGN: Prospective cohort study using records from the UK Liver Transplant Audit (UKLTA) linked to Hospital Episode Statistics (HES), an administrative database of hospital admissions in the English National Health Service (NHS). Comorbidities relevant for liver transplantation were identified from the 10th revision of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10) codes in HES records of admissions in the year preceding their operation. Multivariable Cox regression was used to estimate HRs for three different time periods after liver transplantation.
SETTING: All liver transplant centres in the NHS hospitals in England. PARTICIPANTS: Adults who received a first elective liver transplant between April 1997 and March 2010 in the linked UKLTA-HES database. OUTCOMES: Patient mortality in three different time periods after transplantation.
RESULTS: Among 3837 recipients, 45.1% had comorbidities. Recipients with cardiovascular disease had statistically significantly higher mortality in all three periods after transplantation (first 90 days: HR=2.0; 95% CI 1.4 to 2.9, 90 days-5 years: 1.6; 1.2 to 2.2, beyond 5 years: 2.8; 1.7 to 4.4). Prior congestive cardiac failure (3.2; 2.1 to 4.9) significantly increased mortality only in the first 90 days. History of non-hepatic malignancy appeared to increase risk over all periods, but significantly only in the first 90 days (1.9; 1.0 to 3.6). A diagnosis of connective tissue disease, dementia, diabetes, chronic pulmonary and renal disease did not have a significant impact on mortality in any period.
CONCLUSIONS: The impact of comorbidities present at the time of transplantation changes with time after transplantation. Renal disease, pulmonary disease and diabetes had no impact on mortality in contrast to previous reports. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.

Entities:  

Keywords:  CARDIOLOGY; DIABETES & ENDOCRINOLOGY; ONCOLOGY; TRANSPLANT MEDICINE; TRANSPLANT SURGERY

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25976762      PMCID: PMC4442248          DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-006971

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMJ Open        ISSN: 2044-6055            Impact factor:   2.692


A large national clinical database with linkage to administrative data was used, and a newly developed instrument to capture comorbidity information relevant to liver transplant patients from administrative data was applied. Multivariable Cox regression analysis including interaction between comorbidities and time periods was used to show that some comorbidities had a different impact on survival in different time periods after liver transplantation. Our comorbidity instrument has been adapted from the Charlson Comorbidity Index, which captures important comorbidities. However, some minor health problems may not have been included.

Introduction

Comorbidity is an important determinant of outcome in medical and surgical patients.1–6 However, in liver transplant patients, the reported impact of comorbidities on the outcome varies widely.7–11 One frequently used tool to measure comorbid conditions is the Charlson Comorbidity Index.12 Single-centre studies from the USA13 and Italy14 have demonstrated that this index is associated with outcome after liver transplantation. Nevertheless, other studies suggest that it does not reliably predict short-term post-transplant mortality.15 16 Comorbidities may have a different impact on mortality in different time periods after liver transplantation.17 18 For example, congestive cardiac failure may have an impact on short-term mortality,19 but not in the long term. Diabetes mellitus may gradually damage tissues and thus have an impact on mortality in the long term.8 We investigated the impact of comorbidities on patient mortality in three time periods after liver transplantation (first 90 days, 90 days–5 years and 5–10 years). To do this, we linked the UK Liver Transplant Audit (UKLTA) database at patient level to the Hospital Episode Statistics (HES), an administrative database of all admissions to English National Health Service (NHS) hospitals. A specific coding scheme was developed to identify comorbidities relevant for liver transplantation from the HES diagnosis codes, which are based on the 10th revision of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10). This coding scheme is an adaptation of the Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) Charlson Score, which has been validated in various groups of surgical patients.20–23

Materials and methods

The adaptation of the RCS Charlson Score for use in liver transplantation

The RCS Charlson Score is an ICD-10-based comorbidity score that can be derived from administrative hospital records and is developed for use in surgical patients. We adapted this score to make it suitable for patients receiving a liver transplant by following a number of coding principles: A morbidity that is linked to an indication for liver transplantation, even it affects other organs, should not be coded as a comorbidity. A morbidity that can be caused by liver disease should not be coded as a comorbidity. Comorbidities that are parts of the same spectrum of disease should be grouped together. A comorbidity with very low prevalence (ie, less than 1%) should be ignored. Comorbidities were identified from ICD-10 codes in HES records. These codes were sought from the index admission (the admission for liver transplantation) and also from all admissions in the year before the transplant. Some ICD-10 codes that reflect acute conditions such as acute renal failure (marked with * in table 1) were defined as comorbidities only if they were present in preceding admissions. If these codes were present only in the index admission, they were ignored as it is uncertain whether they are truly comorbidities or complications that occurred perioperatively.20
Table 1

Eight comorbidities from the Royal College of Surgeons Charlson Score adapted for use in liver transplant patients and their ICD-10 codes

Disease categoryICD-10 codes
1. Cardiovascular disease
 1.1 Myocardial infarctionI21*, I22*, I23*, I25.2
 1.2 Peripheral vascular diseaseI70–I73, I77.0, I77.1, K55.1, K55.8, K55.9, R02, Z95.8, Z95.9
 1.3 Cerebrovascular diseaseG45, G46, I60–I69
2. Congestive cardiac failureI11, I13, I25.5, I42, I43, I50, I51.7
3. Connective tissue diseaseM05, M06, M09, M12.0, M31.5, M32–M36
4. DementiaA81.0, F00–F03, F05.1, G30, G31
5. Diabetes mellitusE10–E14
6. Non-hepatic malignancyC00–C21, C26, C30–C34, C37–C41, C43, C45–C58, C60–C74, C75.0–C75.8, C76, C78.0–C78.6, C78.8, C79, C80–C85, C88, C90–C97
7. Chronic pulmonary diseaseI26, I27, J40–J45, J46*, J47, J60–J67, J68.4, J70.1, J70.3
8. Chronic renal diseaseI12, I13, N01, N03, N05, N07, N08, N17.1*, N17.2*, N18, N19*, N25, Z49, Z94.0, Z99.2

*Indicates an acute condition that should be used to define comorbidity only if present in a record of a previous hospital admission within the preceding year.

ICD-10, 10th revision of the International Classification of Diseases.

Eight comorbidities from the Royal College of Surgeons Charlson Score adapted for use in liver transplant patients and their ICD-10 codes *Indicates an acute condition that should be used to define comorbidity only if present in a record of a previous hospital admission within the preceding year. ICD-10, 10th revision of the International Classification of Diseases. Conditions linked to indications for liver transplantation (eg, chronic liver disease) were not considered as comorbidities. Also, we excluded codes for particular cancers that can lead to indications for liver transplantation: C22 (primary liver cancer), C24 (cancer of biliary tract) and C25 (endocrine pancreatic cancer) or C75.9 (other endocrine cancer) with C78.7 (liver metastasis of neuroendocrine cancer). The code C77 (lymph node metastasis) was also excluded as it reflects a staging of malignant disease rather than a diagnosis itself. Codes for other metastatic solid tumours were combined and considered as a single comorbidity. Myocardial infarction, peripheral vascular disease, cerebrovascular disease were grouped together as cardiovascular disease because they all have the physiological impact on the cardiovascular system of a patient. Congestive cardiac failure was included as a separate group because it can also result from other causes, for example, valvular heart disease, non-ischaemic cardiomyopathy. Hemiplegia/paraplegia and HIV/AIDS had a very low prevalence in our cohort of liver transplant recipients (0.2% and 0.3%, respectively), and were therefore ignored. Constructing the adapted Charlson score using the above principles resulted in eight comorbidity categories (table 1).

The linked UKLTA-HES database

We used records from UKLTA linked at patient level to records from HES. The UKLTA database prospectively collects pretransplant recipient, donor, perioperative and follow-up data including survival information for all patients undergoing liver transplantation in the UK for audit purposes.24 The HES database contains administrative records of all admissions to NHS hospitals in England.25 HES records contain ICD-10 diagnosis codes26 and procedure codes based on the fourth revision of the Office for Population Censuses and Survey classification of interventions and procedures (OPCS-4) codes.27 The linkage was based on hierarchical deterministic linkage criteria, including NHS number, sex, date of birth, postcode, date of transplantation and a procedure code for liver transplantation or a diagnosis code relevant to liver disease. This linked data set contained records of patients receiving a first liver transplant in the UK between 1 April 1997 and 31 March 2010. A detailed description and an evaluation of the linkage process have been published elsewhere.28 All patients were followed up for at least 2 years. We excluded linked records of paediatric liver transplantation (ie, recipients younger than 17 years), multiorgan transplantation, living-donor liver transplantation, domino liver transplantation and super urgent liver transplantation.

Statistical analysis

The prevalence of each individual comorbidity and number of concomitant comorbidities in each patient were described according to the era of transplantation. Unadjusted mortality rates were calculated using the Kaplan–Meier method and described as percentages with 95% CIs. The impact of comorbidities on mortality after liver transplantation was assessed with multivariable Cox regression, allowing for three time periods after liver transplantation: the first 90 days, 90 days–5 years and beyond 5 years. These cut-off points are commonly used in the UK to describe short-term and mid-term transplant outcome.29 Mortality in the first 90-day period mostly reflects surgical outcome including complications from liver transplant operations, while mortality after 90 days is probably caused by long-term medical complications including those related to immunosuppression. Furthermore, in the UK, a patient is accepted on to the transplant list if the potential recipient is predicted to have at least 50% 5-year post-transplant survival.30 The analysis was censored at 10 years after transplantation. Results are presented as HRs and 95% CIs, separately for each of the three time periods. To assess the change in HRs over the three time periods, we conducted an interaction test between time period and comorbidity. A p value less than 0.05 was considered to indicate that the effect of the comorbidity significantly changes over time. The multivariable model included all comorbidities, age, sex, the primary liver disease (9 groups), era of liver transplantation (categorised into 4 eras), pretransplant mechanical ventilation, previous abdominal surgery, serum creatinine, bilirubin and sodium, donor type (donor after brain death vs donor after cardiac death), graft appearance (healthy vs suboptimal) and graft type (whole vs segmental). All factors were analysed as binary or continuous variables unless otherwise stated. A goodness-of-fit test was performed to confirm that the multivariable model is well calibrated and fits the data well by comparing the observed mortality with the expected mortality as predicted by the model in 10 equally sized groups ranked according to the model's predicted mortality.31 We used multiple imputation by chained equations32 to deal with any missing values of risk factors in UKLTA data. Missing values were replaced with 10 sets of plausible values. These 10 data sets were analysed individually and the estimates were then combined to obtain the overall estimates by using Rubin's rules and rules for combining χ2 statistics.33 No variable in the model had more than 10% missing values. Stata V.11.2 (StataCorp, College Station, Texas, USA) was used for all statistical analyses.

Results

Patient and perioperative characteristics

The linked UKLTA-HES data set of adult elective first liver transplants in our study consisted of 3837 patients. Median and IQR of age were 53 (46–60) years, and 63% of the recipients were male. The most common primary liver disease was alcoholic liver disease (22.5%), while 17.3% had cancer as an indication for transplantation (table 2). Median (IQR) follow-up time was 4.7 (1.9–8.0) years with range from 0 to 14.1 years.
Table 2

Characteristics of the adult recipients of an elective first liver transplant in the linked UK Liver Transplant Audit database and Hospital Episode Statistics

CharacteristicValueMissing (N)
Number3837
Age (year)53 (46–60)0
Sex (%)0
 Male2400 (62.6)
 Female1437 (37.5)
Ethnicity (%)0
 White3350 (87.3)
 Asian361 (9.4)
 Black89 (2.3)
 Other37 (1.0)
BMI (kg/m2)25.6 (22.7–29.1)215
Primary liver disease (%)0
 Cancer662 (17.3)
 Hepatitis C cirrhosis462 (12.0)
 Primary sclerosing cholangitis410 (10.7)
 Hepatitis B cirrhosis107 (2.8)
 Primary biliary cirrhosis576 (15.0)
 Alcoholic cirrhosis867 (22.5)
 Autoimmune and cryptogenic cirrhosis391 (10.2)
 Metabolic liver disease132 (3.4)
 Other liver disease233 (6.1)
Era of liver transplantation (%)0
 April 1997–September 2000922 (24.0)
 October 2000–September 2003882 (23.0)
 October 2003–September 2006915 (23.9)
 October 2006–March 20101118 (29.1)
Pretransplant mechanical ventilation (%)23 (0.6)1
Previous abdominal surgery (%)598 (15.6)7
Bilirubin (µmol/L)46 (24–95)19
Creatinine (µmol/L)87 (73–104)2
INR1.3 (1.2–1.6)145
Sodium (mmol/L)137 (134–139)9
Donor type (%)0
 Donor after brain death3624 (94.4)
 Donor after cardiac death213 (5.6)
Graft type (%)0
 Whole3568 (93.0)
 Segmental269 (7.0)
Graft appearance (%)313
 Healthy2834 (80.4)
 Suboptimal690 (19.6)

Results are numbers (percentages) or medians (IQRs).

BMI, body mass index; INR, international normalised ratio.

Characteristics of the adult recipients of an elective first liver transplant in the linked UK Liver Transplant Audit database and Hospital Episode Statistics Results are numbers (percentages) or medians (IQRs). BMI, body mass index; INR, international normalised ratio.

Prevalence of the comorbidities

Diabetes mellitus was the most common comorbidity with a prevalence of 23.9%. Chronic pulmonary disease (9.9%) was the second and chronic renal disease (7.7%) the third most common comorbidity (table 3).
Table 3

Prevalence (%) of each individual comorbidity and distribution (%) of number of comorbidities in liver transplant patients categorised by era of transplantation

ComorbidityEra of transplantation
Overall
1997–20002000–20032003–20062006–2010Prevalence (%)N
N92288291511183837
Cardiovascular disease6.05.16.28.36.5250
 Myocardial infarction0.80.61.31.21.037
 Peripheral vascular disease3.03.63.34.93.8145
 Cerebrovascular disease2.31.01.92.41.974
Congestive cardiac failure2.52.23.04.03.0114
Connective tissue disease3.73.44.53.43.7143
Dementia2.33.55.97.34.9187
Diabetes mellitus17.421.925.030.023.9917
Non-hepatic malignancy2.41.81.41.21.764
Chronic pulmonary disease6.56.911.313.89.9378
Chronic renal disease4.36.09.410.97.7294
Number of comorbidities
 062.659.852.246.854.92105
 130.730.332.534.432.11230
 25.99.412.013.810.5402
 3 or more0.90.63.35.12.5100
Prevalence (%) of each individual comorbidity and distribution (%) of number of comorbidities in liver transplant patients categorised by era of transplantation Overall, 45.1% of the patients had at least one comorbidity. About one-third had one comorbidity, 10% had two comorbidities and less than 3% had three comorbidities or more (table 3). The most common combinations of comorbidities among patients who had two comorbidities were diabetes with chronic pulmonary disease (69 patients), and diabetes with chronic renal disease (67 patients). Diabetes with renal disease and cardiovascular disease (12 patients), and diabetes with pulmonary disease and cardiovascular disease (10 patients) were the most common combinations among patients with three comorbidities. The prevalence of some comorbidities changed according to the era of transplantation. Diabetes was found in 17.4% of liver transplant patients during 1997–2000, and this increased to 30% between 2006 and 2010. Chronic renal disease had an increased prevalence from 4.3% to 10.9% during the same period. The prevalence of chronic pulmonary disease and dementia also increased during these eras. The prevalence of cardiovascular disease, congestive cardiac failure and connective tissue disease remained stable, while the prevalence of a history of non-hepatic malignancy decreased over time. The number of patients with more than one comorbidity also increased with time. Only 0.9% of the patients transplanted between 1997 and 2000 had three or more comorbidities, whereas this increased to 5.1% in those transplanted between 2006 and 2010 (table 3).

Effects of comorbidities on post-transplant mortality

Overall, the 90-day mortality rate was 7.0% (95% CI 6.3% to 7.9%). The 5-year mortality rate was 24.1% (22.6% to 25.6%), and the 10-year mortality rate was 37.6% (35.5% to 39.7%). Patients with congestive cardiac failure had the highest 90-day mortality rate at 20.2% (95% CI 13.9% to 28.8%; figure 1). Patients with a history of non-hepatic malignancy (15.6%; 8.7% to 27.1%), cardiovascular disease (12.4%; 8.9% to 17.2%) and chronic renal disease (9.9%; 7.0% to 13.9%) also had an increased 90-day mortality. The highest 5-year mortality rates were found in recipients with a history of non-hepatic malignancy (39.9%; 28.6% to 53.6%), congestive cardiac failure (37.5%; 28.2% to 48.7%), cardiovascular disease (35.5%; 29.1% to 42.8%) and chronic renal disease (31.2%; 25.5% to 37.8%). Patients with cardiovascular disease had the highest 10-year mortality rate at 60.0% (50.3% to 70.0%).
Figure 1

Kaplan–Meier post-transplant mortality curves of liver transplant recipients with and without comorbidity.

Kaplan–Meier post-transplant mortality curves of liver transplant recipients with and without comorbidity.

Effects of comorbidities on mortality in different time periods after liver transplantation

Cardiovascular disease was associated with a statistically significantly increased risk of mortality in all three time periods after liver transplantation. The change in the risk of mortality across the three time periods after transplantation was not statistically significant (interaction test: p=0.14). Nevertheless, the risk was the highest after 5 years with an adjusted HR of 2.8 (95% CI 1.7 to 4.4). The adjusted HRs were 2.0 (1.4 to 2.9) for the first 90 days and 1.6 (1.2 to 2.2) for 90 days–5 years (figure 2).
Figure 2

Adjusted HRs and their 95% CIs of each comorbidity on patient mortality in the three time periods after liver transplantation (within 90 days, 90 days–5 years and 5–10 years). aInteraction test compares HRs of the three time periods of survival after liver transplantation.

Adjusted HRs and their 95% CIs of each comorbidity on patient mortality in the three time periods after liver transplantation (within 90 days, 90 days–5 years and 5–10 years). aInteraction test compares HRs of the three time periods of survival after liver transplantation. Patients with congestive cardiac failure had a significantly higher 90-day mortality risk than those without (adjusted HR=3.2; 95% CI 2.1 to 4.9). However, this excess risk was not observed beyond 90 days (90 days–5 years: 1.9; 0.7 to 2.0, beyond 5 years: 0.8; 0.3 to 2.6; figure 2). This observed reduction of risk across the three time periods was statistically significant (interaction test: p=0.01). In all three time periods, a history of non-hepatic malignancy was associated with a similar increase in the risk of death (interaction test: p=0.84). However, this was statistically significant only in the first 90 days (adjusted HR=1.9; 95% CI 1.0 to 3.6). The corresponding figures for the periods of 90 days–5 years and beyond 5 years after transplantation were 1.6 (0.9 to 2.7) and 2.0 (0.9 to 4.5), respectively (figure 2). The remaining five comorbidities, connective tissue disease, dementia, diabetes, chronic pulmonary disease and chronic renal disease, did not show a statistically significant association with mortality in any of the time periods. However, there was some evidence to suggest that chronic renal disease increased the risk of death in the first 90 days (adjusted HR=1.4; 95% CI 0.9 to 2.1), and the mortality of patients with dementia increased beyond 5 years (1.8; 0.9 to 3.4). The interaction test for diabetes (p=0.09) indicates that the effect of diabetes on mortality may change over the follow-up time, whereas the changes in the HRs across time periods for other comorbidities were not significant (figure 2). The goodness-of-fit test of the multivariable Cox regression model showed no significant difference between expected and observed mortality in 10 equally divided groups, and suggested that the model was well calibrated (p=0.69).

Discussion

This study demonstrates that some comorbidities diagnosed before transplantation have a significant impact on post-transplant mortality and that the impact may vary according to time after transplantation. Cardiovascular disease increases the risk of post-transplant mortality in all time periods up to 10 years. In contrast, we observed an increased risk only in the short term for patients with congestive cardiac failure. A history of non-hepatic malignancy seems to be associated with higher mortality for the whole follow-up period. This detailed analysis of the impact of comorbidity was only possible because we developed a specific coding scheme to extract information on comorbidities relevant for liver transplantation from ICD-10 diagnosis codes in linked administrative hospital records for a large number of liver transplant patients. Diabetes mellitus was the most common comorbidity (24%), similar to studies in the USA13 and Italy.14 Chronic pulmonary disease (10%) and chronic renal disease (8%) were found to be the second and third most common comorbidities, which corresponds to their prevalence reported in the Italian study (11% for pulmonary disease and 7% for renal disease). Nevertheless, the prevalence of some comorbidities was clearly different from other studies. This may result from variations in the definition of comorbidities. For example, the prevalence of chronic renal disease is 16% in the US study, which used a serum creatinine level of 1.5 mg/dL or greater as their definition.13 The differences in prevalence may also be due to coding methods or the patient selection criteria of the transplant programmes. We identified congestive cardiac failure as a comorbidity in 3% of our cohort, whereas it was particularly rare in the US (0.5%) and Italian cohort (0%). Our comorbidity coding scheme defines congestive cardiac failure as right or left ventricular failure (ICD-10 code I50), cardiomyopathy (I42, I43), cardiomegaly (I51.7), hypertensive heart failure (I11, I13) and ischaemic cardiomyopathy (I25.5). Prevalence of a history of non-hepatic malignancy in our cohort was 1.7%, comparable to the US study (3%), but much lower than in the Italian study (14%). In our analysis, cardiovascular disease was found to be a risk factor for mortality in all time periods after liver transplantation. Similarly, the US study found that coronary disease was a significant risk factor for post-transplant mortality (HR=2.3).13 Not only have we confirmed the increased risk of death in these patients, we also observed that the impact is more prominent in later years (HR=2.8). This suggests that liver transplant recipients with cardiovascular disease should have more intensive investigation and management of cardiovascular complications in the long term after transplantation. A previous study did not find evidence to suggest that congestive cardiac failure increased the risk of death.13 However, it was a small study of 710 liver transplant recipients, only 3 of whom had congestive cardiac failure. In contrast, our study found that congestive cardiac failure was associated with higher mortality but only in the early post-transplant period. This short-term effect may be linked to the haemodynamically stressful effect of the operation, while the cardiac condition can be effectively controlled with medication in the long term. Despite a relatively low prevalence of a history of non-hepatic malignancy in this liver transplant cohort (1.7%, 64 patients), we found that this comorbid condition was associated with an increased risk of death across all time periods, albeit only statistically significant in the first 90 days. Further review revealed that the most common prior malignancies were colorectal cancer (13 patients), cancer of unknown primary (12 patients) and leukaemia/lymphoma (11 patients) with a total of 27 patients having abdominal cancer. There were 30 deaths in the 64 patients with non-hepatic malignancy (10 patients in the first 90 days, 20 patients after 90 days). All the causes of death of the 10 patients who died within 90 days were not cancer-related (sepsis in 7 patients and multiple organ failure in 3 patients). Prior surgery associated with previous abdominal cancer treatment may have been responsible for the observed increased risk of early postoperative death in these patients.34 Additionally, these early deaths may have been indirectly related to the increased risk of sepsis arising from immunosuppression from prior cancer treatment. In this context, it is also important to note that among the patients with non-hepatic malignancy who died after 90 days, 14 of the 20 patients (70%) had a malignancy coded as a cause of death. There is conflicting evidence about whether diabetes is a risk factor for death after liver transplantation. Some studies did show a significant impact,10 13 35 while others did not.34 36 We found no evidence that diabetes had an impact on either short-term or long-term survival. This is most likely explained by the intensive screening for cardiovascular complications in diabetic liver transplant candidates in our cohort. It is an important observation that with such screening and careful patient selection as well as active diabetes management after transplantation, recipients with diabetes have outcomes comparable to recipients without diabetes. The absence of an impact of a diagnosis of diabetes on outcome after transplantation may also be because the multivariable Cox regression models were adjusted for cardiovascular disease, which is the main cause of post-transplant death in diabetic cases. The prevalence of most of the comorbidities included in this study has increased over time. The prevalence of diabetes in liver transplant recipients almost doubled over 10 years from 17.4% before 2000 to 30.0% after 2010. This increase may be the results of improved coding of administrative data in the UK,37 the increased incidence of diabetes in the general population38 or the increase in prevalence of aetiologies of primary liver disease related to diabetes, including hepatitis C cirrhosis and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.39 40 The percentage of recipients with at least one comorbidity has also increased, reflecting a willingness to list higher risk patients or patients with comorbidities for liver transplantation. A strength of our study is that we could use a national clinical audit linked to administrative hospital data allowing us to study a wide range of comorbidities in a large number of patients. The administrative data provided information about comorbidity. In other studies of comorbidity in liver transplantation, comorbidities were identified through retrospective clinical chart review.13–16 Chart review is cumbersome as well as time and resource consuming. The number of patients included in such studies is often small. Comorbidities in liver transplant recipients are not that common, and a large sample size is required to study their effects on survival. A number of limitations should be recognised. First, the administrative information recorded in the HES database was not originally designed for research purposes. It is possible that we have underestimated the prevalence of comorbidities because of incomplete coding, especially in earlier years. However, there is growing evidence that administrative data can be a reliable resource for clinical research.41–44 A key factor in improving its value for research is the development and validation of strategies to identify patients with particular conditions. Our study is an example of such work. Coding practice has improved and the overall coding of the primary diagnosis in the HES database has been shown to be accurate in 96% of the cases in recent years.28 37 Also, our comorbidity coding scheme used broad disease categories to limit the impact of coding error. Second, we found that 13% of the patients had two or more comorbidities. We explored the impact of individual comorbidities, but there was limited statistical power to investigate potential interaction effects of multiple comorbidities on outcome. Third, we acknowledge that by modifying an existing comorbidity index we may have missed other health problems that may have prognostic implications but were not included in the original index (eg, hypertension). However, the Charlson Comorbidity Index is a validated and extensively used comorbidity tool, which was constructed to capture most of the important comorbid conditions. Fourth, it is not always possible to distinguish liver-related conditions from true comorbidities. For example, volume overload, which is not an uncommon condition in patients with cirrhosis, may lead to symptoms mimicking congestive cardiac failure. Fifth, the grouping of comorbidities in the cardiovascular disease category is also a potential limitation because the observed effects on outcome cannot be attributed to an individual comorbidity. Effects of comorbidities that are in the same spectrum of diseases are likely to be in the same direction, but may not be of similar magnitude. Finally, our study was not designed to assess the impact of morbidity linked to or caused by liver diseases as a result of how comorbidity was defined.

Implications

Our ICD-10 coding scheme to extract comorbidity information relevant for liver transplantation from linked administrative data can contribute to other aspects of liver transplant research and service evaluation. For example, it can be included in prognostic models used for risk adjustment when outcomes after liver transplantation between centres are compared. Comorbidity information should be used in conjunction with all other available risk factors to improve the selection and allocation process of liver transplantation. Congestive cardiac failure has a significant effect only on short-term mortality, while cardiovascular disease is associated with increased short-term, mid-term and long-term mortality. Non-hepatic malignancy is associated with higher mortality over the whole follow-up period. It is important that analysis methods allow for potential time-varying effects over a long follow-up period. Liver transplant patients should be managed according to their specific comorbidities and follow-up periods. Our data suggest that with careful screening and management, patients with diabetes and those with renal and pulmonary disease can be safely transplanted with comparable outcomes, while patients with cardiovascular disease have higher risk and should be carefully investigated and managed for its complications in the long term.
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Authors:  G R Parkerson; W E Broadhead; C K Tse
Journal:  J Clin Epidemiol       Date:  1993-04       Impact factor: 6.437

10.  The importance of co-existent disease in the occurrence of postoperative complications and one-year recovery in patients undergoing total hip replacement. Comorbidity and outcomes after hip replacement.

Authors:  S Greenfield; G Apolone; B J McNeil; P D Cleary
Journal:  Med Care       Date:  1993-02       Impact factor: 2.983

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  15 in total

1.  Pretransplant diabetes mellitus predicts worse outcomes of liver transplantation: evidence from meta-analysis.

Authors:  P Li; H Fan; Q He
Journal:  J Endocrinol Invest       Date:  2017-06-30       Impact factor: 4.256

Review 2.  Defining the threshold for too sick for transplant.

Authors:  Jennifer C Lai
Journal:  Curr Opin Organ Transplant       Date:  2016-04       Impact factor: 2.640

3.  The liver transplant risk score prognosticates the outcomes of liver transplant recipients at listing.

Authors:  Christof Kaltenmeier; Dana Jorgensen; Stalin Dharmayan; Subhashini Ayloo; Vikrant Rachakonda; David A Geller; Samer Tohme; Michele Molinari
Journal:  HPB (Oxford)       Date:  2020-11-11       Impact factor: 3.647

4.  Cardiovascular mortality in liver and kidney transplant recipients: A retrospective analysis from a single institution.

Authors:  Zrinka Sertić; Tomislav Letilović; Tajana Filipec Kanižaj; Mladen Knotek; Irzal Hadžibegović; Inga Starovečki; Helena Jerkić
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2021-05-21       Impact factor: 1.817

Review 5.  Cardiovascular risk after orthotopic liver transplantation, a review of the literature and preliminary results of a prospective study.

Authors:  Giuseppina Pisano; Anna L Fracanzani; Lucio Caccamo; Maria F Donato; Silvia Fargion
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2016-10-28       Impact factor: 5.742

6.  Time spent in hospital after liver transplantation: Effects of primary liver disease and comorbidity.

Authors:  Chutwichai Tovikkai; Susan C Charman; Raaj K Praseedom; Alexander E Gimson; Jan van der Meulen
Journal:  World J Transplant       Date:  2016-12-24

7.  Recovery of Moderate Coronavirus Disease 2019 in a Liver Transplant Recipient on Continued Immunosuppression: A Case Report.

Authors:  Victor Dahl Mathiasen; Stine Karlsen Oversoe; Peter Ott; Søren Jensen-Fangel; Steffen Leth
Journal:  Transplant Proc       Date:  2020-09-17       Impact factor: 1.066

8.  Anaesthesia for Liver Transplantation: An Update.

Authors:  Lavinia Nicoleta Brezeanu; Radu Constantin Brezeanu; Mircea Diculescu; Gabriela Droc
Journal:  J Crit Care Med (Targu Mures)       Date:  2020-05-06

9.  Epidemiological pattern, incidence, and outcomes of COVID-19 in liver transplant patients.

Authors:  Jordi Colmenero; Manuel Rodríguez-Perálvarez; Magdalena Salcedo; Ana Arias-Milla; Alejandro Muñoz-Serrano; Javier Graus; Javier Nuño; Mikel Gastaca; Javier Bustamante-Schneider; Alba Cachero; Laura Lladó; Aránzazu Caballero; Ainhoa Fernández-Yunquera; Carmelo Loinaz; Inmaculada Fernández; Constantino Fondevila; Miquel Navasa; Mercedes Iñarrairaegui; Lluis Castells; Sonia Pascual; Pablo Ramírez; Carmen Vinaixa; María Luisa González-Dieguez; Rocío González-Grande; Loreto Hierro; Flor Nogueras; Alejandra Otero; José María Álamo; Gerardo Blanco-Fernández; Emilio Fábrega; Fernando García-Pajares; José Luis Montero; Santiago Tomé; Gloria De la Rosa; José Antonio Pons
Journal:  J Hepatol       Date:  2020-08-01       Impact factor: 25.083

10.  Evaluation of published assessment tools for comorbidity in liver transplantation: a systematic review protocol.

Authors:  Zhi Qu; Jill Gwiasda; Harald Schrem; Alexander Kaltenborn; Lena Harries; Jan Beneke; Volker Amelung; Christian Krauth
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2018-06-30       Impact factor: 2.692

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