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Role of precipitants in transition of acute decompensation to acute-on-chronic liver failure in patients with HBV-related cirrhosis

Authors :
Tongyu Wang
Wenting Tan
Xianbo Wang
Xin Zheng
Yan Huang
Beiling Li
Zhongji Meng
Yanhang Gao
Zhiping Qian
Feng Liu
Xiaobo Lu
Huadong Yan
Yubao Zheng
Weituo Zhang
Shan Yin
Wenyi Gu
Yan Zhang
Fuchen Dong
Jianyi Wei
Guohong Deng
Xiaomei Xiang
Yi Zhou
Yixin Hou
Qun Zhang
Shue Xiong
Jing Liu
Liyuan Long
Ruochan Chen
Jinjun Chen
Xiuhua Jiang
Sen Luo
Yuanyuan Chen
Chang Jiang
Jinming Zhao
Liujuan Ji
Xue Mei
Jing Li
Tao Li
Rongjiong Zheng
Xinyi Zhou
Haotang Ren
Yu Shi
Hai Li
Source :
JHEP Reports, Vol 4, Iss 10, Pp 100529- (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2022.

Abstract

Background & Aims: Pre-acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) is a distinct intermediate stage between acute decompensation (AD) and ACLF. However, identifying patients with pre-ACLF and predicting progression from AD to ACLF is difficult. This study aimed to identify pre-ACLF within 28 days, and to develop and validate a prediction model for ACLF in patients with HBV-related decompensated cirrhosis. Methods: In total, 1,736 patients with HBV-related cirrhosis and AD were enrolled from 2 large-scale, multicenter, prospective cohorts. ACLF occurrence within 28 days, readmission, and 3-month and 1-year outcomes were collected. Results: Among 970 patients with AD without ACLF in the derivation cohort, the 94 (9.6%) patients with pre-ACLF had the highest 3-month and 1-year LT-free mortality (61.6% and 70.9%, respectively), which was comparable to those with ACLF at enrollment (57.1% and 67.1%); the 251 (25.9%) patients with unstable decompensated cirrhosis had mortality rates of 22.4% and 32.1%, respectively; while the 507 (57.9%) patients with stable decompensated cirrhosis had the best outcomes (1-year mortality rate of 2.6%). Through Cox proportional hazard regression, specific precipitants, including hepatitis B flare with HBV reactivation, spontaneous hepatitis B flare with high viral load, superimposed infection on HBV, and bacterial infection, were identified to be significantly associated with ACLF occurrence in the derivation cohort. A model that incorporated precipitants, indicators of systemic inflammation and organ injuries reached a high C-index of 0.90 and 0.86 in derivation and validation cohorts, respectively. The optimal cut-off value (0.22) differentiated high-risk and low-risk patients, with a negative predictive value of 0.95. Conclusions: Three distinct clinical courses of patients with AD are validated in the HBV-etiology population. The precipitants significantly impact on AD-ACLF transition. A model developed by the precipitant–systemic inflammation–organ injury framework could be a useful tool for predicting ACLF occurrence. Clinical trial number: NCT02457637 and NCT03641872. Lay summary: It was previously shown that patients with decompensated cirrhosis could be stratified into 3 groups based on their short-term clinical prognoses. Herein, we showed that this stratification applies to patients who develop cirrhosis as a result of hepatitis B virus infection. We also developed a precipitant-based model (i.e. a model that incorporated information about the exact cause of decompensation) that could predict the likelihood of these patients developing a very severe liver disease called acute-on-chronic liver failure (or ACLF).

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
25895559 and 87144840
Volume :
4
Issue :
10
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
JHEP Reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8714484046294fef9a20778039281768
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhepr.2022.100529