5 results on '"Thuluvath AJ"'
Search Results
2. Liver transplantation in patients with multiple organ failures: Feasibility and outcomes.
- Author
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Thuluvath PJ, Thuluvath AJ, Hanish S, and Savva Y
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Feasibility Studies, Female, Graft Survival, Humans, Liver Transplantation mortality, Male, Middle Aged, Multiple Organ Failure mortality, Liver Transplantation methods, Multiple Organ Failure surgery
- Abstract
Background & Aims: Multiple organ failures (OFs) are common in patients with cirrhosis, but the independent effect of the number or type of OFs on liver transplantation (LT) outcomes is not well defined., Method: United Network for Organ Sharing data were analyzed from 2002 to 2016 for all adults listed for LT who received an LT within 30 days after listing. We estimated post-LT survival stratified by number and type of pre-transplant OFs before and after adjusting for confounding variables., Results: During the study period, 4,714 (4.1%) patients died and 19,375 (16.6%) patients were transplanted within 30 days of listing. One or more OF were more common in those who were transplanted (57.4%) compared to those without LT (9.5%). The probability of staying alive more than 30 days on the waiting list without LT decreased with increasing number of OFs; while 90% were alive without OF, only 20% were alive with two OFs, and 2-8% with three or more OFs. The interval between listing and transplantation decreased with an increase in OFs, and the median time to transplant after listing was only 4-5 days with three or more OFs. Although the risk of post-LT mortality increased with increasing number of OFs, the 90-day patient survival was 90% and one-year survival was 81% in the presence of 5-6 OFs. The number of OFs was an independent predictor of survival, but the maximum difference in one-year graft or patient survival between those without OF and those with 5-6 OFs was only 9%. Additionally, the type of OF had minimal impact on outcomes., Conclusions: Liver transplantation is feasible with excellent outcomes, even in the presence of five or six OFs., Lay Summary: Multiple organ failures, ranging from 1-6, are common in hospitalized patients with cirrhosis. The survival without liver transplant is dismal in the presence of three or more organ failures. Small retrospective studies have shown that liver transplant is feasible with good outcomes even in the presence of multiple organ failures. In this study, using a large national dataset, we show that survival chances for more than 30 days in those with three or more organ failures are less than 8%. However, if a liver transplant is performed quickly, the survival chances are very high with one-year survival ranging from 84% with three organ failures to 81% with 5-6 organ failures., (Copyright © 2018 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Reply to: "NASH-related and cryptogenic cirrhosis similarities extend beyond cirrhosis": Cryptogenic cirrhosis should not be equated with NASH cirrhosis based on UNOS data mining and Bayesian 'doctrine of chances'.
- Author
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Thuluvath PJ, Kantsevoy S, Thuluvath AJ, and Savva Y
- Subjects
- Bayes Theorem, Data Mining, Fibrosis, Humans, Liver Cirrhosis, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Karnofsky performance status before and after liver transplantation predicts graft and patient survival.
- Author
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Thuluvath PJ, Thuluvath AJ, and Savva Y
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Graft Survival, Karnofsky Performance Status, Liver Transplantation mortality
- Abstract
Background & Aims: The Karnofsky performance status (KPS) has been used for almost 70 years for clinical assessment of patients. Our objective was to determine whether KPS is an independent predictor of post-liver transplant (LT) survival after adjusting for known confounders., Method: Adult patients listed with the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) from 2006 to 2016 were grouped into low (10-40%, n = 15,103), intermediate (50-70%, n = 22,183) and high (80-100%, n = 13,131) KPS groups based on KPS scores at the time of LT, after excluding those on ventilators or life support. We determined the trends in KPS before and after LT, and survival probabilities based on KPS., Results: There was a decline in KPS scores between listing and LT and there was significant improvement after LT. The graft and patient survival differences were significantly lower (p <0.0001) in those with low KPS. After adjusting for other confounders, the hazard ratios for graft failure were 1.17 (1.12-1.22, p <0.01) for the intermediate and 1.38 (1.31-1.46, p <0.01) for the low group. Similarly, hazard ratios for patient failure were 1.18 (1.13-1.24, p <0.01) for the intermediate and 1.43 (1.35-1.52, p <0.01) for the low group. Other independent negative predictors for graft and patient survival were older age, Black ethnicity, presence of hepatic encephalopathy and donor risk index. Those who did not show significant improvements in post-LT KPS scores had poorer outcomes in all three KPS groups, but it was most obvious in the low KPS group with one-year patient survival of 33%., Conclusion: The KPS, before and after LT, is an independent predictor of graft and patient survival after adjusting for other important predictors of survival., Lay Summary: The overall health of liver transplant recipients could be assessed by a simple clinical assessment tool called the Karnofsky performance status, which assesses an individual's overall functional status on an 11-point scale, in increments of 10, where a score of 0 is considered dead and 100 is considered perfect health. In this study, using a large dataset, we show that the performance status before and after liver transplant is a predictor of survival. More importantly, those who have low performance status before transplant and do not show an improvement in performance status between 3-12 months after liver transplant have very poor survival., (Copyright © 2018 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Is cryptogenic cirrhosis different from NASH cirrhosis?
- Author
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Thuluvath PJ, Kantsevoy S, Thuluvath AJ, and Savva Y
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Diabetes Mellitus epidemiology, Diagnosis, Differential, Female, Hepatitis, Chronic complications, Hepatitis, Chronic diagnosis, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Obesity epidemiology, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Sex Factors, Hepatitis, Autoimmune complications, Hepatitis, Autoimmune diagnosis, Liver Cirrhosis diagnosis, Liver Cirrhosis epidemiology, Liver Cirrhosis etiology, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease complications, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease diagnosis
- Abstract
Background & Aims: We hypothesized that patients currently diagnosed with cryptogenic cirrhosis (CC) have truly 'cryptogenic' liver disease, which is unlikely to have evolved from NASH. The aim of this study is to characterize patients with CC, and compare their characteristics to patients with cirrhosis of other etiologies., Methods: To investigate this, we compared the clinical characteristics of adults with CC (n = 7,999) to those with cirrhosis caused by non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) (n = 11,302), alcohol (n = 21,714) and autoimmune hepatitis (n = 3,447), using the UNOS database from 2002-16. We performed an age, gender and year of listing matched comparison of CC and NASH (n = 7,201 in each group), and also stratified patients by the presence of obesity or diabetes mellitus (DM)., Results: From 2002 to 2016, patients listed with a diagnosis of NASH increased from about 1% to 16% while CC decreased from 8% to 4%. A logistic regression model using the entire United Network for Organ Sharing data (n = 138,021) suggested that the strongest predictors of NASH were type 2 DM, obesity, age ≥60 years, female gender and white race. Type 2 DM was more common in patients with NASH (53%) than those with CC (29%), alcoholic cirrhosis (16%) and autoimmune hepatitis (16%), and obesity was more common in NASH (65.3%) compared to the other three groups (33-42%). There were more white individuals (82.3%) in the NASH group and a lower prevalence of black, Hispanic and Asian individuals, compared to the other three groups. Hepatocellular carcinoma was more commonly seen in NASH (19% vs. 9-13% in the other groups) and this is not influenced by obesity and type 2 DM. The differences between CC and NASH remained unchanged even when two groups were matched for age, gender and year of listing, or when stratified by the presence or absence of obesity or type 2DM., Conclusions: Based on risk perspectives, CC should not be equated with the term 'NASH cirrhosis'., Lay Summary: We hypothesized that cryptogenic cirrhosis is a distinct condition from cirrhosis caused by non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). By comparing cryptogenic cirrhosis with cirrhosis of other causes, we found clear clinical differences. Therefore, cryptogenic cirrhosis should not be considered the same as NASH cirrhosis. Further investigations are required to identify unknown causes of cirrhosis., (Copyright © 2017 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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