| Literature DB >> 34966658 |
Cyriac Abby Philips1, Mohamed Rela2, Arvinder Singh Soin3, Subhash Gupta4, Sudhindran Surendran5, Philip Augustine6.
Abstract
The novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has impacted health care worldwide, with specific patient populations, such as those with diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and chronic lung disease, at higher risk of infection and others at higher risk of disease progression. Patients with decompensated cirrhosis fall into the latter category and are a unique group that require specific treatment and management decisions because they can develop acute-on-chronic liver failure. In liver transplant recipients, the atypical immunity profile due to immunosuppression protects against downstream inflammatory responses triggered by COVID-19. This exhaustive review discusses the outcomes associated with COVID-19 in patients with advanced cirrhosis and in liver transplant recipients. We focus on the immunopathogenesis of COVID-19, its correlation with the pathogenesis of advanced liver disease, and the effect of immunosuppression in liver transplant recipients to provide insight into the outcomes of this unique patient population.Entities:
Keywords: Acute-on-chronic liver failure; Cirrhosis; Coronavirus; Critical care; Hepatic encephalopathy; Multiple-organ failure; Portal hypertension; Sepsis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34966658 PMCID: PMC8666374 DOI: 10.14218/JCTH.2021.00228
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Transl Hepatol ISSN: 2225-0719
Fig. 1Schematic diagram showing common components and pathways driving cirrhosis-associated immune dysfunction and novel coronavirus-related disease.
In cirrhosis, persistent PRR activation leads to upregulation and downstream signaling of various cytokine pathways, such as the interferon pathway, proinflammatory interleukins, growth factor-mediated signaling, NF-kB and JNK pathway as TNF-a signaling, which are also common to inflammatory downstream activation associated with COVID-19. The innate and adaptive cellular responses leading to immune exhaustion is also common to both cirrhosis and COVID-19 which worsens organ damage. AT, angiotensin; JNK, Janus-kinase pathway.
Fig. 2Schematic diagram showing immunopathogenesis of COVID-19 and immunology of liver transplant recipients and pathways affected by IS that contribute to disease progression or reduction in clinical severity.
In the liver transplant recipient, IS drugs downregulate certain specific inflammatory pathways, such as basiliximab on IL-6, corticosteroid action on NK cells, B cell activation and ILs, and tacrolimus on prolonged T cell activation. These inflammatory pathways are the very same which are highly activated through novel coronavirus receptor binding. In the presence of IS and amelioration of inflammatory signaling, COVID-19 activity and clinical outcomes could remain asymptomatic or mild among this special group of patients. CsA, cyclosporine A.
Summary of pertinent studies on COVID-19 in cirrhosis
| Study | Design/Patients | Clinical outcomes | Major comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jeon | Korean national cohort, propensity score matching, | Variceal bleeding 3%; Ascites 3%; HE 4.5%; Mortality 9% | Older age, hypertension, cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and higher Charlson comorbidity index associated with higher risk of severe complications. Cirrhosis was not independently associated with the development of severe complications, including mortality, in patients with COVID-19 |
| Shalimar | Single center from India, case control study, | ACLF 34.6%; Acute decompensation 61.5%; Variceal bleeding 30.8%; Ascites 7.7%; Mortality 42.3% | COVID-19 was associated with poor outcomes in patients with cirrhosis especially in those developing ACLF. Mechanical ventilation was associated with a poor outcome |
| Kim | Multicenter, observational cohort study from USA, | Acute decompensation 29.5%; Variceal bleeding 3.1%; HE 10.1%; Ascites 4.8%; Mortality 25% | Independent risk for death - alcohol etiology, decompensated cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Risk for severe COVID-19-decompensated cirrhosis and Hispanic ethnicity |
| Lee | Multicenter South Korean cohort study, | Child-Pugh class A 64.3%; Child-Pugh class B 35.7%; Secondary bacterial infection 7.1%; Mortality 28.6% | Higher proportion with cirrhosis required oxygen therapy, intensive unit admission, had septic shock and lung and renal failure. Overall survival rate significantly lower in patients with liver cirrhosis |
| Moon | International reporting registries (COVID-Hep.net and COVIDCirrhosis.org), | Decompensation 36.9%; Variceal bleeding 1%; Ascites 27.2%; SBP 2.9%; Mortality 39.8% | Cause of death in patients with cirrhosis was lung disease in 78.7%. Mortality correlated strongly with baseline Child-Pugh B/C class and MELD |
| Sarin | Data from 13 Asian countries, | ACLF 11.6%; Acute decompensation 9.3%; Variceal bleeding 9.3%; HE 7%; SBP 7%; Mortality 16.3% | Liver related complications increased with stage of liver disease. Child-Pugh score ≥9 at presentation predicted high mortality. In decompensated cirrhotics, the liver injury was progressive in 57% patients, with 43% mortality. Rising bilirubin and AST/ALT ratio predicted mortality among cirrhosis patients. SARS-CoV-2 infection causes significant liver injury in cirrhosis, decompensating one-fifth affected |
| Iavarone | Italian multicenter retrospective study, | ACLF 28%; HE 22%; Mortality 34% | 30-day-mortality rate 34%. Severity of lung and liver as per CLIF-C/OF scores independently predicted mortality. In patients with cirrhosis, mortality was significantly higher in those with COVID-19 than in those hospitalized for bacterial infections |
| Clift | Population-based cohort study using electronic health record data, | 106 hospitalizations with COVID-19 in patients with cirrhosis; 37 deaths from COVID-19 in patients with cirrhosis | QCOVID population-based risk algorithm model. Since the chance of being hospitalized or dying from COVID-19 is critically dependent on factors that the authors did not include in their model, the algorithm does not know who actually was exposed to or was infected by the virus |
| Ioannou | Veterans Affairs national health care system cirrhosis population study, | Patients with cirrhosis were less likely to test positive than patients without cirrhosis; Cirrhosis+COVID-19 were 4.1-times more likely to undergo mechanical ventilation | Most important predictors of mortality were advanced age, cirrhosis decompensation, and high MELD score. COVID-19 was associated with a 3.5-fold increase in mortality in patients with cirrhosis. Cirrhosis was associated with a 1.7-fold increase in mortality in patients with COVID-19 |
| Qi | Chinese retrospective multicenter study (COVID-Cirrhosis-CHESS), | ACLF 4.8%; Variceal bleeding 19%; Ascites 5.9%; Mortality 23.8% | Small size and narrow composition of study population. Cause of death in most patients was respiratory failure rather than progression of liver disease. Lower lymphocyte and platelet counts, and higher direct bilirubin level are poor prognostic indicators |
| Bajaj | North American multicenter study, | ACLF 30%; Variceal bleeding 14%; HE 14%; Mortality 30% | Cirrhosis+COVID-19 had worse Charlson Comorbidity Index, higher lactate. Age/gender-matched patients with cirrhosis+COVID-19 had similar mortality compared with patients with cirrhosis alone but higher than patients with COVID-19 alone |
| Marjot | Multicenter international registries case control study, | ACLF 23%; Acute decompensation 46%; Variceal bleeding 3%; HE 27%; SBP 3%; Mortality 32% | Compared to patients without CLD significant increases in mortality in those with Child-Pugh B and C notable. 21% with acute decompensation had no respiratory symptoms. Half of those with hepatic decompensation developed ACLF. Baseline liver disease stage and alcohol-related liver disease are independent risk factors for death from COVID-19 |
MELD, model for end stage liver disease; HE, hepatic encephalopathy; ACLF, acute on chronic liver failure; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; SBP, spontaneous bacterial peritonitis.
Summary of pertinent studies on COVID-19 in liver transplant recipients
| Study | Design/Patients | Clinical outcomes | Major comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kates | Multicenter prospective cohort study, | 28-day mortality 21% in whole solid organ transplant cohort ( | Age >65 years, congestive heart failure, chronic lung disease, obesity, lymphopenia, abnormal chest imaging independently associated with mortality. Multiple measures of IS intensity not associated with mortality |
| Ravanan | Multicenter national cohort study, | Overall mortality 23%; Reduced risk of COVID-19 in transplanted patients | Increasing recipient age was the only variable independently associated with death |
| Colmenero | Prospective multicenter cohort study, | Mortality in LT recipients 18%, which was lower than the matched general population; Chronic IS increases the risk of acquiring COVID-19 but could reduce disease severity | Baseline mycophenolate independent risk factor for severe COVID-19 (ICU, IPPV or death) particularly at doses higher than 1,000 mg/day. Deleterious effect not observed with calcineurin inhibitors or everolimus. Complete IS withdrawal showed no benefit |
| Webb | Multinational registry study, | Overall mortality 19%; LT did not significantly increase the risk of death | Risk factors for mortality within LT recipients included age, renal function (serum creatinine) and non-liver cancer |
| Rabiee | Multicenter retrospective cohort study, | Overall mortality (22%); No independent risk factors for death identified | Incidence of acute liver injury lower in LT recipients. Factors associated with liver injury - younger age, Hispanic ethnicity, antibiotic use and metabolic syndrome. Reduction in IS not associated with liver injury or mortality |
| Belli | European registry study, ELITA/ELTR Multicenter cohort, | Overall mortality 20%; Risk factors for mortality include age, diabetes and chronic kidney disease | Tacrolimus had positive independent effect of survival. Increasing age, renal impairment and diabetes associated with higher mortality |
| Webb | Combined analysis from a multinational cohort, | Overall mortality 18–19% | Age and Charlson Comorbidity Index independently associated with death. No association with type of IS regime |
| Fraser | Systematic review and quantitative analysis, | 36% had severe COVID-19; Dyspnea on presentation, diabetes mellitus, and age ≥60 years significantly associated with increased mortality | LT recipients with severe COVID-19 are overrepresented with regard to severe disease and hospitalizations. Older liver transplant patients with diabetes mellitus or hypertension on maintenance corticosteroids are at high risk of death |
LT, liver transplantation; ICU, intensive care unit; IPPV, invasive positive pressure ventilation.
Fig. 3Current updates in the management of COVID-19 in patients with decompensated cirrhosis and liver transplant recipients.
As per published literature, the general management of COVID-19 is shown in the middle panel, while specific considerations for the management of decompensated cirrhosis patients and liver transplant recipients is shown in the left and right panels, respectively. It is pertinent to note that the use of remdesivir for COVID-19 is not recommended by the WHO or real-world data, but feature in guidelines released by certain governments and its use is subject to treating physician discretion. AKI, acute kidney injury; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; AUD, alcohol use disorder; AVB, acute variceal bleeding; AZI, azithromycin; CAD, coronary artery disease; CAM, complementary and alternative medicines; CKD, chronic kidney disease; CNI, calcineurin inhibitor; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; DM, diabetes mellitus; ECMO, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; EGD, esophago-gastro-duodenoscopy; FiO2, fraction of inspired oxygen; GGO, ground glass opacity; LOLA, L-ornithine-L-aspartate; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; HCQs, hydroxychloroquine; HDU, high-dependency unit; HE, hepatic encephalopathy; HFNC, high-flow nasal cannula; HRS, hepatorenal syndrome; ICU, intensive care unit; IV, intravenous; LF, low-flow; LMWH, low molecular weight heparin; Lop, lopinavir; MMF, mycophenolate mofetil; mono-Abs, monoclonal antibodies; MPA, mycophenolic acid; mTOR, mechanistic target of rapamycin; MV, mechanical ventilation; NSAIDS, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; PP, partial pressure; Rito, ritonavir; sHTN, systemic hypertension; ULN, upper limit of normal.