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Optimising risk stratification in primary biliary cirrhosis: AST/platelet ratio index predicts outcome independent of ursodeoxycholic acid response.

Authors :
Trivedi, Palak J.
Bruns, Tony
Cheung, Angela
Li, Ka-Kit
Kittler, Clemens
Kumagi, Teru
Shah, Husnain
Corbett, Christopher
Al-Harthy, Nadya
Acarsu, Unsal
Coltescu, Catalina
Tripathi, Dhiraj
Stallmach, Andreas
Neuberger, James
Janssen, Harry L.A.
Hirschfield, Gideon M.
Source :
Journal of Hepatology. Jun2014, Vol. 60 Issue 6, p1249-1258. 10p.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Background & Aims: Outcomes in primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) can be predicted by biochemical response to ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA). Such stratification inadequately captures cirrhosis/portal hypertension, recognised factors associated with adverse events. Methods: We evaluated a cohort of PBC patients (n=386) attending the Liver Unit in Birmingham (derivation cohort), seeking to identify risk-variables associated with transplant-free survival independent of UDCA-response. A validation cohort was provided through well-characterised patients attending the Toronto Center for Liver Diseases (n=479) and Jena University Hospital (n=150). Results: On multivariate analysis, factors at diagnosis associated with liver transplant (LT)/death were patient age (HR:1.06; p <0.001), elevated bilirubin (HR:1.27; p <0.001), early-onset cirrhosis (HR:2.40; p <0.001) and baseline AST/platelet ratio index (APRI) (HR:1.95; p <0.001). At 1-year, UDCA biochemical non-response predicted poorer transplant-free survival, and additional factors (multivariate) associated with adverse outcome were age (HR:1.02; p <0.05) and 1-year APRI (HR:1.15; p <0.001). Obtaining a cut-point from our derivation cohort, APRI >0.54 at baseline was predictive of LT/death (adjusted HR: 2.40; p <0.001), and retained statistical significance when applied at 1-year (APRI-r1, adjusted HR:2.75; p <0.001) despite controlling for UDCA-response. Across both cohorts, transplant-free survival was poorer for biochemical-responders with an APRI-r1 >0.54 vs. biochemical-responders with a lower APRI-r1 (p <0.01 and p <0.001, respectively); non-responders with high APRI-r1 had the poorest outcomes (p <0.001 and p <0.001). Conclusion: In PBC, elevated APRI is associated with future risk of adverse events, independently and additively of UDCA-response. This cross-centre, robustly validated observation will contribute to ongoing efforts to refine existing risk-stratification tools, as well as direct focus for new therapies in patients with PBC. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01688278
Volume :
60
Issue :
6
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Hepatology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
96020425
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhep.2014.01.029