| Literature DB >> 30724010 |
Jacqueline G O'Leary1,2, Jasmohan S Bajaj3, Puneeta Tandon4, Scott W Biggins5, Florence Wong6, Patrick S Kamath7, Guadalupe Garcia-Tsao8, Benedict Maliakkal9, Jennifer Lai10, Michael Fallon11, Hugo E Vargas12, Paul Thuluvath13, Ram Subramanian14, Leroy R Thacker15, K Rajender Reddy16.
Abstract
Acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) characterized with ≥2 extrahepatic organ failures in cirrhosis carries a high mortality. Outcomes of patients listed for liver transplantation (LT) after ACLF and after LT are largely unknown. The North American Consortium for the Study of End-Stage Liver Disease prospectively enrolled 2793 nonelectively hospitalized patients with cirrhosis; 768 were listed for LT. Within 3 months, 265 (35%) received a LT, 395 remained alive without LT, and 108 died/delisted. Compared with nonlisted patients, those listed were younger and more often had ACLF, acute kidney injury, and a higher admission Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) score. ACLF was most common in patients who died/delisted, followed by those alive with and without LT respectively, (30%, 22%, and 7%, respectively; P < 0.001). At LT, median MELD was 27.9% and 70% were inpatients; median time from hospitalization to LT was 26 days. Post-LT survival at 6 months was unchanged between those with and without ACLF (93% each at 6 months). There was no difference in 3- and 6-month mean post-LT creatinine in those with and without ACLF, despite those with ACLF having a higher mean pre-LT creatinine and a higher rate of perioperative dialysis (61%). In conclusion, patients with and without ACLF had similar survival after transplant with excellent renal recovery in both groups.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30724010 DOI: 10.1002/lt.25426
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Liver Transpl ISSN: 1527-6465 Impact factor: 5.799