1. Comparative evaluation of ALBI, MELD, and Child-Pugh scores in prognosis of cirrhosis: is ALBI the new alternative?
- Author
-
Elias A. Kouroumalis, Dimitra Sifaki-Pistolla, Eleni Orfanoudaki, and Maria Fragaki
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Cirrhosis ,Child-Pugh ,Population ,Gastroenterology ,albumin-bilirubin score ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Liver disease ,0302 clinical medicine ,Model for End-Stage Liver Disease ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,model for end-stage liver disease ,education ,education.field_of_study ,Creatinine ,business.industry ,Hazard ratio ,Area under the curve ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,body regions ,chemistry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Original Article ,business - Abstract
Background: The existence of reliable prognostic indices is of paramount importance in the management of cirrhosis. Both the model for end-stage liver disease (MELD) score and the older Child-Pugh (CP) scores are widely used. The albumin-bilirubin (ALBI) score, initially used in hepatocellular carcinoma, has not been thoroughly investigated in cirrhosis. The aim of this study was to compare the prognostic accuracy of ALBI, MELD, MELD with sodium (MELD-Na), CP, and the corrected for creatinine CP scores in a genetically homogeneous Cretan cirrhotic population. Methods: One hundred ninety-five outpatients or hospitalized cirrhotics (127 male, median age 66 years) were studied over a period of 2 years and ALBI, platelet-albumin-bilirubin, MELD, MELD-Na, CP score, and 2 types of modified CP score (CP-I and CP-II) with serum creatinine were calculated and correlated with survival. Results: ALBI had an optimum balance between sensitivity and specificity (area under the curve 0.704, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.630-0.778) compared to the other scores. In the multivariate analysis, the only factors independently associated with death were the ALBI score (hazard ratio [HR] 2.51, 95%CI 1.69-3.73; P
- Published
- 2019