| Literature DB >> 30443736 |
Juan José García Martínez1,2, Karim Bendjelid3,4,5.
Abstract
The liver is a complex organ that performs vital functions of synthesis, heat production, detoxification and regulation; its failure carries a highly critical risk. At the end of the last century, some artificial liver devices began to develop with the aim of being used as supportive therapy until liver transplantation (bridge-to-transplant) or liver regeneration (bridge-to-recovery). The well-recognized devices are the Molecular Adsorbent Recirculating System™ (MARS™), the Single-Pass Albumin Dialysis system and the Fractionated Plasma Separation and Adsorption system (Prometheus™). In the following years, experimental works and early clinical applications were reported, and to date, many thousands of patients have already been treated with these devices. The ability of artificial liver support systems to replace the liver detoxification function, at least partially, has been proven, and the correction of various biochemical parameters has been demonstrated. However, the complex tasks of regulation and synthesis must be addressed through the use of bioartificial systems, which still face several developmental problems and very high production costs. Moreover, clinical data on improved survival are conflicting. This paper reviews the progress achieved and new data published on artificial liver support systems over the past decade and the prospects for these devices.Entities:
Keywords: Acute liver failure; Acute on chronic liver failure; Albumin dialysis; Artificial liver support; FPSA; MARS; Prometheus; SPAD
Year: 2018 PMID: 30443736 PMCID: PMC6238018 DOI: 10.1186/s13613-018-0453-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925
Studies with clinical endpoints for ALF using MARS
| Study | Years | Design | Patients number | Outcomes | Comments | LOE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kantola et al. [ | 2008 | Controlled, non-randomized | 159 | No improvement in 28-day and 6-month survivals | Trend to improved survival in unknown aetiology subgroup | 2 |
| Novelli et al. [ | 2008 | Uncontrolled, prospective | 6 | Neurological and haemodynamic improvements* | Paediatric population | 3 |
| PELD and SOFA improvement** | ||||||
| Novelli et al. [ | 2009 | Uncontrolled, retrospective | 45 | Number of MARS treatments associated with survival* | No improvement with MARS is a predictive factor of a fatal outcome and the need for a transplant | 3 |
| Camus et al. [ | 2009 | Uncontrolled, retrospective | 18 | Clinical improvement | Clinical improvement compared to a control group obtained from a national register* | 3 |
| MARS therapy associated with withdrawal from the emergency transplantation list* | ||||||
| Saliba et al. [ | 2013 | Controlled, randomized, multicentre | 102 | No improvement in 6-month, 6-month transplantation-free and 1-year survivals | High transplant rate and short waiting time until transplant | 1 |
| Similar adverse effects | ||||||
| Lexmond et al. [ | 2015 | Controlled, non-randomized | 20 | No improvement in survival | Patients in MARS group were sicker | 2 |
| Patients in MARS group received more thrombocyte transfusion* | ||||||
| Paediatric population | ||||||
| Gerth et al. [ | 2017 | Controlled, non-randomized | 73 | No improvement in 28-day survival | Patients with graft dysfunction included | 2 |
| No differences in outcomes between subgroups | ||||||
| Biochemical improvement** | ||||||
| Hanish et al. [ | 2017 | Uncontrolled, retrospective | 27 | Improvement in encephalopathy and in the APACHE II score** | Biochemical improvement* | 3 |
| Quintero Bernabeu et al. [ | 2018 | Uncontrolled, retrospective | 11 | Haemodynamic improvement* | Paediatric population | 3 |
| No significant adverse effects |
LOE level of evidence, determined using the strength of recommendation taxonomy (SORT) criteria [50], SMT standard medical therapy, HE hepatic encephalopathy, PELD paediatric end-stage liver disease, SOFA sequential organ failure assessment, APACHE II Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II
*p < 0.01
**p < 0.05
Studies with clinical endpoints for AoCLF using MARS
| Study | Years | Design | Patients number | Outcomes | Comments | LOE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hessel et al. [ | 2010 | Controlled, randomized | 149 | 3-year survival improvement* | Acceptable cost-outcome ratio (measured by cost per LYG and costs per QALY) | 2 |
| Inadequate randomization | ||||||
| Novelli et al. [ | 2010 | Controlled, non-randomized | 20 | MELD improvement** | Delta MELD predict survival | 2 |
| Bañares et al. [ | 2013 | Controlled, randomized, multicentre | 156 | No improvement in 28-day and 90-day transplant-free survivals | No differences in 28-day transplant-free survival in subgroups: MELD > 20, HRS at admission, severe HE, and progressive hyperbilirubinemia | 1 |
| Gerth et al. [ | 2017 | Controlled, non-randomized | 101 | Improvement in 7-day** and 14-day*** transplant-free survivals | No differences in 21-day and 28-day transplant-free survivals | 2 |
| Improvement in estimate 28-day transplant-free survival rate in subgroup of patients with two or more organs failure (CLIF-ACLF grade ≥ 2)* |
LOE level of evidence, determined using the strength of recommendation taxonomy (SORT) criteria [50], SMT standard medical therapy, LYG life years gained, QALY quality-adjusted life years, MELD model for end-stage liver disease, HRS hepatorenal syndrome, HE hepatic encephalopathy, CLIF-ACLF chronic liver failure-acute-on-chronic liver failure
*logrank p < 0.05
**p < 0.01
***p < 0.05
Studies with clinical endpoints for ALF and AoCLF combined using MARS
| Study | Years | Design | Patients number | Outcomes | Comments | LOE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rusu et al. [ | 2009 | Uncontrolled, retrospective | 27 | Improvement in HE in ALF** | Haemodynamic improvement in patients with liver failure post-transplantation** | 3 |
| No clinical improvement in AoCLF | ||||||
| Stutchfield et al. [ | 2011 | Systematic review | 8 RCT | ELS improved survival in ALF** | Independent meta-analysis for trials including patients with ALF or AoCLF | 2 |
| No statistically significant reduction in mortality in AoCLF | 3 trials using bioartificial devices included | |||||
| Vaid et al. [ | 2012 | Meta-analysis | 9 RCT | Improvement in HE* | No significant differences in subgroups (by age or MARS number sessions) | 2 |
| No statistically significant reduction in overall mortality | Safety data no meta-analyzed | |||||
| Cisneros-Garza et al. [ | 2014 | Uncontrolled, retrospective | 70 | Improvement in HE* | Patients with cholestasis disease were included. MARS associated with improved itching | 3 |
| Tsipotis et al. [ | 2015 | Meta-analysis | 10 RCT | Improvement in HE* | No significant differences in subgroups (by number of sessions or type of albumin dialysis technique) | 2 |
| No statistically significant reduction in overall mortality | 3 trials used Prometheus | |||||
| Guo-Lin He et al. [ | 2015 | Systematic review | 10 RCT | Reduction in mortality in ALF** | Independent meta-analysis for trials including patients with ALF or AoCLF | |
| No statistically significant reduction in mortality in AoCLF | Very few patients with ALF included | 2 |
LOE level of evidence, determined using the strength of recommendation taxonomy (SORT) criteria [50], HE hepatic encephalopathy, RCT randomized controlled trial, ELS extracorporeal liver support, NRS non-randomized controlled study
*p < 0.01
**p < 0.05
Studies using MARS in clinical indications other than for ALF or AoCLF
| Study | Years | Design | Patients number | Clinical indication | Outcomes | LOE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wong et al. [ | 2009 | Uncontrolled, prospective | 6 | Type 1 HRS refractory to vasoconstrictor therapy | No improvement in haemodynamics | 3 |
| No improvement in GFR; temporary improvement of creatinine during MARS** | ||||||
| Reduction in NO levels** | ||||||
| Schaefer et al. [ | 2012 | Uncontrolled, retrospective | 3 | Severe cholestatic pruritus | Paediatric patients | 3 |
| Significant decrease in NRS score* | ||||||
| 135 MARS sessions in total, during 4, 8 and 13 months prior liver transplantation | ||||||
| Lavayssière et al. [ | 2013 | Uncontrolled, retrospective | 32 | Type 1 HRS | No improvement in renal function | 3 |
| In patients receiving norepinephrine, significant dose reductions** | ||||||
| Gilg et al. [ | 2018 | Uncontrolled, prospective | 10 | Post-hepatectomy liver failure | No improvement in MELD | 3 |
| No major complications reported |
LOE level of evidence, determined using the strength of recommendation taxonomy (SORT) criteria [50], HRS hepatorenal syndrome, GFR glomerular filtration rate, NO nitric oxide, NRS score numeric rating scale, NRS 0: no pruritus, NRS 10: maximal pruritus, MELD model for end-stage liver disease
*p < 0.01
**p < 0.05
Studies with clinical endpoints using Prometheus
| Study | Years | Design | Patients number | Liver disease | Outcomes | LOE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sentürk et al. [ | 2010 | Uncontrolled, prospective | 27 | ALF | Biochemical improvement | 3 |
| Kribben et al. [ | 2012 | Randomized, controlled, multicentric | 145 | AoCLF | No improvement in 28-day and 90-day survivals, except in subgroup with MELD > 30 | 1 |
| Bergis et al. [ | 2012 | Controlled, non-randomized, multicentric | 20 | Amanitas phalloides intoxication and liver dysfunction | No statistically significance difference in survivals | 2 |
| Komardina et al. [ | 2017 | Uncontrolled, prospective | 39 | Ischaemic ALF | Haemodynamic and biochemical improvements** | 3 |
LOE level of evidence, determined using the strength of recommendation taxonomy (SORT) criteria [50], HE hepatic encephalopathy, SMT standard medical therapy, MLED model for end-stage liver disease
*p < 0.05
**p < 0.01