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Carvedilol to prevent hepatic decompensation of cirrhosis in patients with clinically significant portal hypertension stratified by new non-invasive model (CHESS2306).

Authors :
Liu C
You H
Zeng QL
Wong YJ
Wang B
Grgurevic I
Liu C
Yim HJ
Gou W
Dong B
Ju S
Guo Y
Yu Q
Hirooka M
Enomoto H
Hanafy AS
Cao Z
Dong X
Lv J
Kim TH
Koizumi Y
Hiasa Y
Nishimura T
Iijima H
Xu C
Dai E
Lan X
Lai C
Liu S
Wang F
Guo Y
Lv J
Zhang L
Wang Y
Xie Q
Shao C
Liu Z
Ravaioli L
Colecchia A
Li J
Teng GJ
Qi X
Source :
Clinical and molecular hepatology [Clin Mol Hepatol] 2024 Jul 11. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jul 11.
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Ahead of Print

Abstract

Background & Aims: Non-invasive models stratifying clinically significant portal hypertension (CSPH) are limited. Herein, we developed a new non-invasive model for predicting CSPH in patients with compensated cirrhosis and investigated whether carvedilol can prevent hepatic decompensation in patients with high-risk CSPH stratified using the new model.<br />Methods: Non-invasive risk factors of CSPH were identified via systematic review and meta-analysis of studies involving patients with hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG). A new non-invasive model was validated for various performance aspects in three cohorts, i.e., a multicenter HVPG cohort, a follow-up cohort, and a carvedilol-treating cohort.<br />Results: In the meta-analysis with six studies (n = 819), liver stiffness measurement and platelet count were identified as independent risk factors for CSPH and were used to develop the new "CSPH risk" model. In the HVPG cohort (n = 151), the new model accurately predicted CSPH with cutoff values of 0 and -0.68 for ruling in and out CSPH, respectively. In the follow-up cohort (n = 1,102), the cumulative incidences of decompensation events significantly differed using the cutoff values of <-0.68 (low-risk), -0.68 to 0 (medium-risk), and >0 (high-risk). In the carvedilol-treated cohort, patients with high-risk CSPH treated with carvedilol (n = 81) had lower rates of decompensation events than non-selective beta-blockers untreated patients with high-risk CSPH (n = 613 before propensity score matching [PSM], n = 162 after PSM).<br />Conclusions: Treatment with carvedilol significantly reduces the risk of hepatic decompensation in patients with high-risk CSPH stratified by the new model.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2287-285X
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Clinical and molecular hepatology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38988296
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3350/cmh.2024.0198