| Literature DB >> 28053053 |
Ruben Hernaez1, Elsa Solà2,3,4, Richard Moreau5,6,7,8,9, Pere Ginès2,3,4.
Abstract
Acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) is a syndrome characterised by acute decompensation of chronic liver disease associated with organ failures and high short-term mortality. Alcohol and chronic viral hepatitis are the most common underlying liver diseases. Up to 40%-50% of the cases of ACLF have no identifiable trigger; in the remaining patients, sepsis, active alcoholism and relapse of chronic viral hepatitis are the most common reported precipitating factors. An excessive systemic inflammatory response seems to play a crucial role in the development of ACLF. Using a liver-adapted sequential organ assessment failure score, it is possible to triage and prognosticate the outcome of patients with ACLF. The course of ACLF is dynamic and changes over the course of hospital admission. Most of the patients will have a clear prognosis between day 3 and 7 of hospital admission and clinical decisions such as evaluation for liver transplant or discussion over goals of care could be tailored using clinical scores. Bioartificial liver support systems, granulocyte-colony stimulating factors or stem-cell transplant are in the horizon of medical care of this patient population; however, data are too premature to implement them as standard of care. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/.Entities:
Keywords: LIVER CIRRHOSIS; LIVER FAILURE
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28053053 PMCID: PMC5534763 DOI: 10.1136/gutjnl-2016-312670
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gut ISSN: 0017-5749 Impact factor: 23.059
Characteristics of the available definitions for acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF)
| APASL definition | EASL-CLIF definition | NACSELD definition | WGO proposal | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Category of study that led to the definition | Report of a consensus involving international experts from the APASL | Prospective, observational study in 1343 patients with cirrhosis admitted to 29 Liver Units in 12 European countries (CANONIC study), in the context of the EASL-CLIF Consortium | Prospective, observational study in 507 patients with cirrhosis hospitalised in 18 Liver Units across the USA and Canada, in the context of the NACSELD Consortium | Report of a consensus involving international experts from the WGO |
| Population considered in the definition |
Acute liver deterioration (see below) in patients with previously diagnosed or undiagnosed chronic liver disease (including cirrhosis) Both compensated cirrhosis and non-cirrhotic chronic liver disease (non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, related chronic hepatic injury or chronic hepatitis with fibrosis, or fibrosis due to other reasons) qualify as chronic liver disease |
Patients with an acute decompensation of cirrhosis* Patients with prior decompensation of cirrhosis are included |
Patients with infection at admission or during hospital stay† Patients with prior decompensation of cirrhosis are included | Patients with chronic liver disease with or without previously diagnosed cirrhosis |
| Population excluded of the definition |
Patients with bacterial infections Patients with cirrhosis and known prior decompensation (jaundice, encephalopathy or ascites) who develop acute deterioration of their clinical status that is either related or unrelated to precipitating events are considered to have acute decompensation but not ACLF |
Admission for scheduled procedure or treatment Hepatocellular carcinoma outside Milan criteria Severe chronic extrahepatic diseases HIV infection; ongoing immunosuppressive treatments |
Outpatients with infection HIV infection Prior organ transplant Disseminated malignancies | Not stated |
| A priori criteria of severity | Experts consider the failing liver as the driver of severity |
Pre-specified criteria for organ failure(s) (according to the CLIF-SOFA scale; see Association of organ failures at enrolment and a 28-day transplant-free mortality of 15% or more | Prespecified criteria for organ failures (see | Not developed but stated CLIF-SOFA ‘is an important step in this direction’ |
| Basis of the definition | Liver failure is defined as jaundice (a serum bilirubin level of ≥5 mg/dL) and coagulopathy (an INR of ≥1.5 or prothrombin activity of <40%). Liver failure is complicated within 4 weeks by clinical ascites and/or encephalopathy in patients with previously diagnosed or undiagnosed chronic liver disease (including cirrhosis) |
Absence of ACLF because 28-day mortality is <5% in patients with:
No organ failure Single organ failure in patients with a serum creatinine level of <1.5 mg/dL and no hepatic encephalopathy Cerebral failure in patients with a serum creatinine level of <1.5 mg/dL ACLF grade 1 because 28-day mortality is 22% in patients with:
Single kidney failure Single liver, coagulation, circulatory or lung failure that is associated with a serum creatinine level of 1.5–1.9 mg/dL and/or hepatic encephalopathy grade 1 or grade 2 Single brain failure with a serum creatinine level of 1.5–1.9 mg/dL ACLF grade 2 because 28-day mortality is 32% in patients with:
Two organs failures ACLF grade 3 because 28-day mortality is 77% in patients with:
Three organ failures or more |
Absence of ACLF: No organ failure Presence of any single organ failure Presence of ACLF (called here infection-related ACLF) Two organ failures or more | ACLF is a syndrome characterised by acute hepatic decompensation resulting in liver failure (jaundice and prolongation of the INR) and one or more extrahepatic organ failures that is associated with increased mortality within a period of 28 days and up to 3 months from onset |
| Comments | The APASL definition has been used to enrol patients in randomised clinical trials evaluating different interventions |
The CLIF-SOFA score has been subsequently simplified A score predicting mortality of patients with ACLF, taking into account the new score, age and white cell count has been established | The probability of survival at 30 days was:
96% in the absence of organ failure Not significantly decreased in patients with single kidney failure Significantly decreased in patients with any other single ‘non-kidney’ organ failure Significantly decreased with two organ failures or more | WGO divides ACLF into three categories:
Type A: chronic liver disease Type B: compensated cirrhosis Type C: decompensated cirrhosis |
*Acute decompensation was defined by the recent development of ascites, encephalopathy, GI haemorrhage, bacterial infection or any combination of these.
†In the NACSELD study, definitions of infections were as follows: (1) spontaneous bacteraemia: positive blood cultures without a source of infection; (2) spontaneous bacterial peritonitis: ascitic fluid polymorphonuclear cells >250/µL; (3) lower respiratory tract infections: new pulmonary infiltrate in the presence of: (i) at least one respiratory symptom (cough, sputum production, dyspnoea, pleuritic pain) with (ii) at least one finding on auscultation (rales or crepitation) or one sign of infection (core body temperature >38 C or <36 C, shivering or leucocyte count >10 000/mm3 or <4000/mm3) in the absence of antibiotics; (4) Clostridium difficile infection: diarrhoea with a positive C. difficile assay; (5) bacterial enterocolitis: diarrhoea or dysentery with a positive stool culture for Salmonella, Shigella, Yersinia, Campylobacter or pathogenic Escherichia coli; (6) soft-tissue/skin infection: fever with cellulitis; (7) urinary tract infection: urine white blood cell >15/high-power field with either positive urine Gram stain or culture; (8) intra-abdominal infections: diverticulitis, appendicitis, cholangitis, etc; (9) other infections not covered above and (10) fungal infections as a separate category. Definition of each organ failure used in the NACSELD study is given in table 2.
APASL, Asian Pacific Association for the Study of the Liver; CANONIC, EASL-CLIF Acute-on-Chronic Liver Failure in Cirrhosis; EASL-CLIF, European Association for the Study of Liver-Chronic Liver failure; INR, international normalised ratio; NACSELD, North American Consortium for Study of End-stage Liver Disease; SOFA, Sequential Organ Failure Assessment; WGO, World Gastroenterology Organisation.
Examples of available definitions of organ failures used in patients with cirrhosis
| Failing organ | Asian Pacific Association for the Study of the Liver organ failures definition (4, 5) | European Association for the Study of Liver-Chronic Liver failure organ failures definition (9) | North American Consortium for Study of End-stage Liver Disease organ failures definition (7) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Liver | Total bilirubin ≥5 mg/dL and INR ≥1.5 | Bilirubin level of >12 mg/dL | – |
| Kidney | Acute Kidney Injury Network criteria | Creatinine level of ≥2.0 mg/dL or renal replacement | Need for dialysis or other forms of renal replacement therapy |
| Brain | West-Haven hepatic encephalopathy grade 3–4 | West-Haven hepatic encephalopathy grade 3–4 | West-Haven hepatic encephalopathy grade 3–4 |
| Coagulation | INR ≥1.5 | INR ≥2.5 | – |
| Circulation | – | Use of vasopressor (terlipressin and/or catecholamines) | Presence of shock defined by mean arterial pressure <60 mm Hg or a reduction of 40 mm Hg in systolic blood pressure from baseline, despite adequate fluid resuscitation and cardiac output |
| Respiration | PaO2/FiO2 of ≤200 or SpO2/FiO2 of ≤214 or need for mechanical ventilation | Need for mechanical ventilation |
FiO2, fraction of inspired oxygen; INR, international normalised ratio; PaO2, partial pressure of arterial oxygen; SpO2, pulse oximetric saturation.
Example of studies examining the underlying cause of chronic liver disease in acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF)
| First author, year (ref) | Country/region | ACLF definition | No | Viral, n (%) | Alcohol, n (%) | Alcohol+viral | Cryptogenic, n (%) | Miscellaneous, n (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Du, 2005 | China | N/R | 650 | 524 (81) | 80 (12) | 46 (7) | ||
| Xia, 2013 | China | # | 857 | 602 (70) | 56 (7) | 149 (17) | 50 (6) | |
| Kedarisetty, 2014 | Asia Pacific | APASL | 1363 | 335 (25) | 645 (47) | 220 (20) | 106 (8) | |
| Shi, 2015 | China | APASL | 540 | 405 (75) | 30 (6) | 62 (11) | 28 (5) | 15 (3) |
| Wehler, 2001 | Germany | SOFA | 143 | 20 (14) | 108 (75) | 5 (4) | 10 (7) | |
| Cholongitas, 2006 | UK | APASL | 312 | 54 (17) | 203 (65) | 14 (5) | 41 (13) | |
| Moreau, 2013 | Europe | CANONIC | 303 | 38 (12) | 170 (56) | 27 (9) | 68 (22) | |
| Bajaj, 2014 | USA | NACSELD | 507 | 124 (25) | 74 (15) | 138 (27) | 78 (15) | 93 (18) |
(#) (1) acute deterioration of pre-existing chronic liver disease; (2) extreme fatigue with severe digestive symptoms, such as obvious anorexia, abdominal distension, nausea and vomiting; (3) progressively worsening jaundice within a short period (serum total bilirubin level ≥10 mg/dL or a daily elevation ≥1 mg/dL); (4) an obvious haemorrhagic tendency with prothrombin activity ≤40% (approximate prothrombin time ≥18.3 s, international normalised ratio >1.50).
APASL, Asian Pacific Association for the Study of the Liver; CANONIC, EASL-CLIF Acute-on-Chronic Liver Failure in Cirrhosis; NACSELD, North American Consortium for Study of End-stage Liver Disease; SOFA, Sequential Organ Failure Assessment.
Reported triggers of acute-on-chronic liver failure, number (%)
| CANONIC | Shi | |
|---|---|---|
| Exacerbation hepatitis B | – | 145 (35.8) |
| Bacterial infection | 98 (32.6) | 113 (27.9) |
| GI haemorrhage | 40 (13.2) | 40 (9.8) |
| Active alcoholism within the past 3 months | 69 (24.5) | 25 (6.1) |
| Other (TIPSS, surgery, large volume paracentesis without albumin, hepatitis, alcoholic hepatitis) | 25 (8.6) | 9 (2) |
| Not identifiable | 126 (43.6) | 83 (20.4) |
| More than one | 39 (13.5) | 36 (8.9) |
CANONIC, EASL-CLIF Acute-on-Chronic Liver Failure in Cirrhosis; TIPSS, transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt.
Figure 1Inflammation caused by microbes. Top: Microbes (bacteria, viruses, fungi) induce inflammation via two classes of molecules: pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) and virulence factors. Sensors of the innate immune system recognise the invading microbe via recognition of PAMPs, which are conserved molecular patterns (structural feature recognition). Sensors are known as pattern-recognition receptors. The second class of microbial inducers of inflammation includes a large number of virulence factors. Most of these factors are generally not recognised by dedicated receptors but can be sensed via the effects of their activity (functional feature recognition). For example, there are bacterial virulence factors which cause modifications and inactivation of host Rho GTPases and these alterations are sensed by the Pyrin inflammasome. Infection may be associated with tissue damage caused by the bacteria or by the immune response to bacteria. Tissue damage can induce inflammation which is committed to tissue repair (see text and reference32). Bottom: Proposed interventions. MELD, Model For End-Stage Liver Disease score.
Examples of PRRs, their ligands (PAMPs) and their origin
| PRR | PAMP | Origin |
|---|---|---|
| TLRs | ||
| TLR1 | Triacylated lipopeptides | Bacteria |
| TLR2 | Peptidoglycan | Bacteria, viruses |
| TLR3 | Double-stranded RNA | Virus |
| TLR4 | Lipopolysaccharides | Bacteria |
| TLR5 | Flagellin | Bacteria |
| TLR6 | Diacylated lipopeptides | Bacteria, viruses |
| TLR7 (human TLR8) | Single-stranded RNA | Virus, bacteria |
| TLR9 | CpG-DNA | Virus, bacteria |
| NLR | ||
| NOD1 | γ- | Bacteria |
| NOD2 | Muramyl dipeptide | Bacteria |
| RIG-I-like receptors | ||
| DDX58 (alias: RIG-I) | Short double-stranded RNA | Viruses |
| IFIH1 (MDA5) | Long double-stranded RNA | Viruses |
| Cytosolic DNA receptors | ||
| AIM2 | Double-stranded DNA | Virus, bacteria |
| C-type lectin receptors | ||
| Dectin-1 | β-Glucan | Fungi |
| Dectin-1 | β-Glucan | Fungi |
| MINCLE | SAP130 | Fungi |
AIM2, absent in melanoma 2; cGAS, cyclic GMP-AMP synthase; CpG-DNA, DNA containing the unmethylated phosphate-guanine (CpG) dideoxynucleotide motif; IFI16, interferon, gamma-inducible protein 16; MINCLE, macrophage inducible C-type lectin; NLR, NOD-like receptor; NOD, nucleotide-binding oligomerisation domain; PAMP, pathogen-associated molecular patterns; PRR, pattern recognition receptor; RIG-I, retinoic acid-inducible gene I; ZBP1, Z-DNA binding protein 1, MB21D1, Mab-21 domain containing 1; TLR, toll-like receptor.
Examples of DAMPs and their receptors
| DAMP | Receptor |
|---|---|
| Released by necrotic cells | |
| ATP | Purinoceptors |
| Monosodium urate | NACHT, LRR and PYD domains containing protein 3 (also known as cryopyrin; encoded by |
| Nuclear DAMPs | |
| High-mobility group protein 1 (encoded by |
Advanced glycosylation end product-specific receptor (encoded by TLRs |
| Histone deacetylase complex subunit SAP130 | C-type lectin domain family 4 member E (encoded by |
| Extracellular histones | Unknown |
| HSPs | TLR2, TLR4 |
| IL-1 family | |
| IL-1α | IL-1R-1 and IL-1RAcP |
| IL-33 | IL-1 receptor-like 1 (also known as protein ST2) and IL-1RAcP |
| S100 calcium-binding protein family | |
| S100A8, S100A9 | TLR4 |
| S100A12 | AGER |
| Mitochondrial DAMPs | |
| Mitochondrial DNA | TLR9 |
| N-formylated peptides | Formyl peptide receptor |
| Peroxiredoxins | TLR2, TLR4 |
| Products of extracellular matrix breakdown | |
| Low-molecular weight fragments of hyaluronic acid | TLR4 |
*Protein names used for DAMPs and receptors are official names provided by UniProtKB (http://www.uniprot.org); genes symbols are provided by Hugo Gene Nomenclature Committee (http://www.genenames.org).
DAMP, danger-associated molecular pattern; HSP, heat shock protein; IL, interleukin; IL-1R-1, IL-1 receptor type 1; IL-1RAcP, IL-1 receptor accessory protein; LRR, leucine-rich repeats; MINCLE, macrophage inducible C-type lectin; NACHT, NAIP, CIITA, HET-E and TP1; PYD, pyrin domain; TLR, toll-like receptor.
CLIF Consortium Organ Failure Score: simplified version of the CLIF-SOFA score
| Organ/system | Variable | Score=1 | Score=2 | Score=3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liver | Bilirubin (mg/dL) | <6 | 6 to ≤12 | >12 |
| Kidney | Creatinine (mg/dL) | <2 | 2 to <3.5 | ≥3.5 or RRT |
| Brain | Encephalopathy grade (West-Haven) | 0 | 1–2 | 3–4 |
| Coagulation | INR | <2 | 2 to <2.5 | ≥2.5 |
| Circulation | MAP (mm Hg) | ≥70 | <70 | Vasopressors |
| Respiratory | PaO2/FiO2 or SpO2/FiO2 | >300 | ≤300 and >200 | ≤200 |
Highlighted areas indicate the definition of each organ failure.
CLIF, chronic liver failure; FiO2, fraction of inspired oxygen; INR, international normalised ratio; MAP, mean arterial pressure; PaO2, partial pressure of arterial oxygen; RRT, renal replacement therapy; SOFA, Sequential Organ Failure Assessment; SpO2, pulse oxymetric saturation.
Figure 2Relationship between organ failure and mortality in acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF). Twenty-eight-day mortality rates of patients with decompensated cirrhosis with (red bars) and without (green bars) ACLF according to the diagnostic criteria proposed in the CANONIC study.9 Patients are divided into the following categories: patients with no organ failure (OF); patients with a single non-kidney organ failure without kidney dysfunction (KD; a serum creatinine level of 1.5–1.9 mg/dL) or brain dysfunction (BD; grade 1–2 hepatic encephalopathy); patients with a single kidney failure; patients with a single non-kidney organ failure with KD and/or BD; patients with two organ failures and patients with three or more organ failures. Adapted with permission from Arroyo et al.27
Figure 3Comparison of the area under the receiver operating curves (AUROCs) to predict 28-day (panel A) and 90-day (panel B) mortality of the chronic liver failure Consortium (CLIF-C) acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) score compared with Model For End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD), Model For End-Stage Liver Disease sodium score (MELD-Na) and Child-Pugh-Turcotte scores (CPs). Adapted with permission from Jalan et al.10
Figure 4Proposed algorithm for the management of patients with acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) or decompensated cirrhosis. A proposed management strategy for patients with ACLF based on mortality rate data from the CANONIC study.8 The first step is the assessment of ACLF grade at days 3–7 after initiation of medical management, including organ support. Liver transplantation should be assessed in all patients with ACLF because of high 90-day mortality rates (>20%). Liver transplantation should be performed as early as possible in patients with ACLF grade 2 and grade 3 as they are at considerable risk of short-term (28-day) mortality. In the case of contraindication of liver transplantation, the presence of four or more organ failures (OFs) or a Chronic Liver Failure Consortium (CLIF-C) ACLF score of >64 at days 3–7 after diagnosis could indicate the futility of care. ICU, intensive care unit. Adapted from Gustot et al51 and obtained from Arroyo et al27 with permission.