Literature DB >> 26260091

Characterization of acute-on-chronic liver failure and prediction of mortality in Asian patients with active alcoholism.

Hwi Young Kim1, Young Chang2, Jae Yong Park2, Hongkeun Ahn2, Hyeki Cho2, Seung Jun Han2, Sohee Oh3, Donghee Kim4, Yong Jin Jung1, Byeong Gwan Kim1, Kook Lae Lee1, Won Kim1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Alcoholic liver diseases often evolve to acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF), which increases the risk of (multi-)organ failure and death. We investigated the development and characteristics of alcohol-related ACLF and evaluated prognostic scores for prediction of mortality in Asian patients with active alcoholism.
METHODS: A total of 205 patients who were hospitalized with severe alcoholic liver disease were included in this retrospective cohort study, after excluding those with serious cardiovascular diseases, malignancy, or co-existing viral hepatitis. The Chronic Liver Failure (CLIF) Consortium Organ Failure score was used in the diagnosis and grading of ACLF, and the CLIF Consortium ACLF score (CLIF-C ACLFs) was used to predict mortality.
RESULTS: Patients with ACLF had higher Maddrey discriminant function, model for end-stage liver disease (MELD), and MELD-sodium scores than those without ACLF. Infections were more frequently documented in patients with ACLF (33.3% vs 53.0%; P = 0.004). Predictive factors for ACLF development were systemic inflammatory response syndrome (odds ratio [OR], 2.239; P < 0.001), serum sodium level (OR, 0.939; P = 0.029), and neutrophil count (OR, 1.000; P = 0.021). For prediction of mortality at predefined time points (28-day and 90-day) in patients with ACLF, areas under the receiver-operating characteristic were significantly greater for the CLIF-C ACLFs than for Child-Pugh, MELD, and MELD-sodium scores.
CONCLUSIONS: Infection and systemic inflammatory response syndrome play an important role in the development of alcohol-related ACLF in Asian patients with active alcoholism. The CLIF-C ACLFs may be more useful for predicting mortality in ACLF cases than liver-specific scoring systems.
© 2015 Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Foundation and John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  acute-on-chronic liver failure; alcoholic liver disease; mortality; prediction

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26260091     DOI: 10.1111/jgh.13084

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Gastroenterol Hepatol        ISSN: 0815-9319            Impact factor:   4.029


  7 in total

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Authors:  Qun Cai; Mingyan Zhu; Jinnan Duan; Hao Wang; Jifang Sheng
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  7 in total

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