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Nomograms for predicting short-term mortality in acute-on-chronic liver disease caused by the combination of hepatitis B virus and alcohol

Authors :
Hongqin Xu
Hai Li
Wenting Tan
Xianbo Wang
Xin Zheng
Yan Huang
Jinjun Chen
Zhongji Meng
Zhiping Qian
Feng Liu
Xiaobo Lu
Yu Shi
Yubao Zheng
Huadong Yan
Weituo Zhang
Xiaoyu Wen
Tao Liu
Yue Feng
Liang Qiao
Wenyi Gu
Yan Zhang
Guohong Deng
Yi Zhou
Shuning Sun
Yixin Hou
Qun Zhang
Yan Xiong
Jing Liu
Ruochan Chen
Min Zhang
Beiling Li
Xiuhua Jiang
Guotao Zhong
Haiyu Wang
Yuanyuan Chen
Sen Luo
Jing Li
Tao Li
Rongjiong Zheng
Xinyi Zhou
Haotang Ren
Yanhang Gao
Source :
Scientific Reports, Vol 14, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2024.

Abstract

Abstract This study aimed to identify predictive factors for the prognosis of acute-on-chronic liver disease (AoCLD) due to both hepatitis B virus (HBV) and alcohol and to develop prognostic models to improve treatment management. AoCLD patients with HBV and alcohol as etiological factors were selected from two multicenter prospective cohorts (NCT02457637,NCT03641872) and included in separate training and validation cohorts (n = 180 and n = 148). In the training cohort, the CATCH-LIFE A nomogram (based on age, bilirubin, international normalized ratio, serum sodium, and hepatic encephalopathy score) and CATCH-LIFE B nomogram (based on age, bilirubin, international normalized ratio, serum albumin, white blood cell, platelet count, and hepatic encephalopathy score) had discriminatory ability for predicting 28-day (c-indexes of 0.910 and 0.899) and 90-day mortality (c-indexes of 0.878 and 0.887, respectively). The area under the curve values for 28-day and 90-day mortality prediction by the CATCH-LIFE A nomogram were 0.922 (95% CI : 0.874, 0.971) and 0.905 (0.856, 0.956), respectively, while those for the CATCH-LIFE B nomogram were 0.916(0.861,0.972) and 0.915 (0.866,0.964), respectively. Similar performance results were observed in the validation cohort. Optimal cut-off scores for each nomogram could be used for patient stratification in high- and low-risk groups, and the high-risk groups showed shorter survival times than the low-risk groups in both the training and validation cohorts. Two nomograms constructed from the first short-term follow-up data from patients with AoCLD due to combined HBV infection and alcohol exposure showed good predictive performance for 28-day and 90-day mortality and might be used to guide clinical management.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
14
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.36fb3ffc3974c80acfb09a845a5efce
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-76473-z