| Literature DB >> 30013405 |
Hiroshi Fukui1, Hideto Kawaratani1, Kosuke Kaji1, Hiroaki Takaya1, Hitoshi Yoshiji1.
Abstract
Among the various risky complications of liver cirrhosis, refractory ascites is associated with poor survival of cirrhotics and persistently worsens their quality of life (QOL). Major clinical guidelines worldwide define refractory ascites as ascites that cannot be managed by medical therapy either because of a lack of response to maximum doses of diuretics or because patients develop complications related to diuretic therapy that preclude the use of an effective dose of diuretics. Due to the difficulty in receiving a liver transplantation (LT), the ultimate solution for refractory ascites, most cirrhotic patients have selected the palliative therapy such as repeated serial paracentesis, transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt, or peritoneovenous shunt to improve their QOL. During the past several decades, new interventions and methodologies, such as indwelling peritoneal catheter, peritoneal-urinary drainage, and cell-free and concentrated ascites reinfusion therapy, have been introduced. In addition, new medical treatments with vasoconstrictors or vasopressin V2 receptor antagonists have been proposed. Both the benefits and risks of these old and new modalities have been extensively studied in relation to the pathophysiological changes in ascites formation. Although the best solution for refractory ascites is to eliminate hepatic failure either by LT or by causal treatment, the selection of the best palliative therapy for individual patients is of utmost importance, aiming at achieving the longest possible, comfortable life. This review briefly summarizes the changing landscape of variable treatment modalities for cirrhotic patients with refractory ascites, aiming at clarifying their possibilities and limitations. Evolving issues with regard to the impact of gut-derived systemic and local infection on the clinical course of cirrhotic patients have paved the way for the development of a new gut microbiome-based therapeutics. Thus, it should be further investigated whether the early therapeutic approach to gut dysbiosis provides a better solution for the management of cirrhotic ascites.Entities:
Keywords: V2 receptor antagonists; antibiotics; large-volume paracentesis; nonselective beta-blockers; pathophysiology; peritoneovenous shunt; transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt
Year: 2018 PMID: 30013405 PMCID: PMC6039068 DOI: 10.2147/HMER.S136578
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hepat Med ISSN: 1179-1535
Definition of refractory ascites in international guidelines (A) and criteria of refractory ascites used by authors from China and Japan (B)
| A | |
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| EASL clinical practice guideline | Ascites that cannot be mobilized or the early recurrence of which (i.e., after therapeutic paracentesis) cannot be satisfactorily prevented by medical therapy |
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| International Ascites Club | Diuretic-resistant ascites: Ascites that cannot be mobilized or the early recurrence of which cannot be prevented because of a lack of response to sodium restriction and diuretic treatment |
| Diuretic-intractable ascites: Ascites that cannot be mobilized or the early recurrence of which cannot be prevented because of the development of diuretic-induced complications that preclude the use of an effective diuretic dosage | |
| 1. Treatment duration: Patients must be on intensive diuretic therapy (spironolactone 400 mg/day and furosemide 160 mg/day) for at least 1 week and on a salt-restricted diet of <90 mmol/day | |
| 2. Lack of response: Mean weight loss of <0.8 kg over 4 days and urinary sodium output less than the sodium intake | |
| 3. Early ascites recurrence: Reappearance of grade 2 or 3 ascites within 4 weeks of initial mobilization | |
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| AASLD clinical practice guideline | Refractory ascites is defined as fluid overload that 1) is unresponsive to sodium-restricted diet and high-dose diuretic treatment (400 mg/day of spironolactone and 160 mg/day of furosemide), or 2) recurs rapidly after therapeutic paracentesis |
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| Zhang et al | Ascites that cannot be satisfactorily controlled after a patient had either 1) 1 week of sodium intake restrictions (<6 g/day), intermittent albumin infusion (10–20 g per treatment), and high doses of diuretics (>160 mg/day of furosemide and 200 mg/day of spironolactone), or 2) 2 weeks of therapeutic paracentesis (3000–5000 mL per treatment) |
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| Taki et al | Defined either as a <1.5 kg/week weight loss while being treated with furosemide (100 mg/day) and spironolactone (150 mg/day) or as a <1.5 kg/week weight loss due to the inability to use an effective dose of diuretics because of development of diuretic-induced hyponatremia (sodium level <125 mEq/L), hyperkalemia (potassium level >5.5 mEq/L), azotemia (doubling of serum creatinine or values >1.5 mg/dL), or hepatic encephalopathy (greater than grade 2 as defined by Parsons-Smith criteria) while on a dietary restriction of sodium 5 g/day as a minor modification |
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| Ohki et al | Ascites detected by ultrasound under the treatment of a loop diuretic at a daily dose equivalent to ≥40 mg/day furosemide and ≥25 mg/day spironolactone, a loop diuretic at a daily dose equivalent to ≥20 mg/day furosemide and ≥50 mg/day spironolactone, or a loop diuretic alone at a daily dose equivalent to ≥60 mg/day furosemide |
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| Tahara et al | Ascites that had not been controlled by standard diuretics (≥20 mg/day furosemide and/or 25 mg/day spironolactone) |
Abbreviations: AASLD, American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases; EASL, European Association for the Study of the Liver.
Comparisons of various treatments for refractory ascites: review of available information
| Indications | Contraindications | Pros | Cons | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Repeated LVP | • First-line treatment for tense ascites | • Acute abdomen that requires surgery | • Fast, effective, and safe | • Carries a risk of post-paracentesis circulatory dysfunction that causes reduced long-term survival |
| Indwelling peritoneal catheter (PleurX™ catheter) | • Refractory ascites unresponsive to routine medical therapy | • Acute abdomen that requires surgery | • Reduce the incidence of post-paracentesis circulatory dysfunction by enabling more frequent but less extensive drainages | • High incidence of infection for a long-term drainage |
| CART | • Refractory ascites unresponsive to routine medical therapy | • Ascites infection such as SBP | • Safe and effective just like LVP with albumin infusion | • High costs of the instruments |
| Peritoneal- urinary drainage (alfapump® system) | • Refractory ascites unresponsive to routine medical therapy | • Active systemic or local infections, such as SBP and urinary tract infection | • Effective for reducing the need for paracentesis (>50% over 6 months) and improving QOL | • Frequent device and procedure-related adverse events |
| PVS | • Diuretic-resistant patients who are not candidates for LT or TIPS, and who are not candidates for serial paracenteses (multiple abdominal scars, etc.) | • Patients with HRS | • Improves GFR and provides palliation in 83% of patients with intractable ascites waiting LT without severe side effects | • Poor long-term patency |
| TIPS | • Selected cirrhotic patients with refractory ascites who require more than two to three LVP per month | Absolute contraindications | • Reduces recurrence of tense ascites compared with LVP | • Induces HE |
Note:
Results by covered TIPS stent.
Abbreviations: CART, cell-free and concentrated ascites reinfusion therapy; CHF, congestive heart failure; DIC, disseminated intravascular coagulation; GFR, glomerular filtration rate; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; HE, hepatic encephalopathy, HRS, hepatorenal syndrome; INR, international normalized ratio; LT, liver transplantation; LVP, large-volume paracentesis; MELD, Model for End-stage Liver Disease; NSBB, nonselective β-blocker; PT, prothrombin time; PVS, peritoneovenous shunt; QOL, quality of life; SBP, spontaneous bacterial peritonitis; TIPS, transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt.
The evidence-based grading about the usefulness of various therapeutic approaches to refractory ascites applying the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) system
| Therapeutic approaches | Quality of evidence | Strength of a recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| Repeated LVP | A | 1 |
| Indwelling peritoneal catheter | B | 2 |
| Peritoneal-urinary drainage | B | 2 |
| CART | B | 2 |
| PVS | A | 2 |
| TIPS | A | 1 |
Notes: The quality of evidence was graded as A (high), B (moderate), C (low), or D (very low). The strength of a recommendation was indicated as either 1 (strong recommendation) or 2 (weak recommendation), for which benefit versus risk and cost were adequately evaluated.
Abbreviations: CART, cell-free and concentrated ascites reinfusion therapy; LVP, large-volume paracentesis; PVS, peritoneovenous shunt; TIPS, transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt.
Figure 1Therapeutic algorithm for refractory ascites.
Notes: Diuretic-resistant or diuretic-intractable ascites are treated by serial therapeutic paracentesis. Meanwhile, all these patients necessitate the consideration of liver transplantation. If transplantation is difficult or takes long time, the patients should be treated by paracentesis for a time being. If indicated, TIPS and PVS can be selected as bridge therapies to liver transplantation. Indwelling peritoneal catheter and peritoneal-urinary drainage are rarely selected for improving QOL of patients who are not candidates for liver transplantation or TIPS. In Japan, CART is sometimes selected to save the requirement of albumin solution after therapeutic paracentesis. Causal treatment of liver disease itself with direct-acting antivirals may dramatically improve the prognosis of patients with hepatitis C virus infection.
Abbreviations: alb. inf., albumin infusion; CART, cell-free and concentrated ascites reinfusion therapy; PVS, peritoneovenous shunt; QOL, quality of life; TIPS, transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt.