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Pulmonary impairment independently determines mortality in critically ill patients with acute-on-chronic liver failure

Authors :
Martin S. Schulz
Jan Mengers
Wenyi Gu
Andreas Drolz
Philip G. Ferstl
Alex Amoros
Frank E. Uschner
Nora Ackermann
Georg Guttenberg
Alexander Queck
Maximilian J. Brol
Christiana Graf
Philipp Stoffers
Anna‐Lena Laguna de la Vera
Carla Cremonese
Hans‐Peter Erasmus
Martin W. Welker
Achim Grünewaldt
Vincente Arroyo
Jörg Bojunga
Javier Fernandez
Stefan Zeuzem
Johannes Kluwe
Kai‐Hendrik Peiffer
Christoph Welsch
Valentin Fuhrmann
Gernot Rohde
Jonel Trebicka
Source :
Liver international : official journal of the International Association for the Study of the LiverREFERENCES. 43(1)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

In ACLF patients, an adequate risk stratification is essential, especially for liver transplant allocation, since ACLF is associated with high short-term mortality. The CLIF-C ACLF score is the best prognostic model to predict outcome in ACLF patients. While lung failure is generally regarded as signum malum in ICU care, this study aims to evaluate and quantify the role of pulmonary impairment on outcome in ACLF patients.In this retrospective study, 498 patients with liver cirrhosis and admission to IMC/ICU were included. ACLF was defined according to EASL-CLIF criteria. Pulmonary impairment was classified into three groups: unimpaired ventilation, need for mechanical ventilation and defined pulmonary failure. These factors were analysed in different cohorts, including a propensity score-matched ACLF cohort.Mechanical ventilation and pulmonary failure were identified as independent risk factors for increased short-term mortality. In matched ACLF patients, the presence of pulmonary failure showed the highest 28-day mortality (83.7%), whereas mortality rates in ACLF with mechanical ventilation (67.3%) and ACLF without pulmonary impairment (38.8%) were considerably lower (p .001). Especially in patients with pulmonary impairment, the CLIF-C ACLF score showed poor predictive accuracy. Adjusting the CLIF-C ACLF score for the grade of pulmonary impairment improved the prediction significantly.This study highlights that not only pulmonary failure but also mechanical ventilation is associated with worse prognosis in ACLF patients. The grade of pulmonary impairment should be considered in the risk assessment in ACLF patients. The new score may be useful in the selection of patients for liver transplantation.

Subjects

Subjects :
Hepatology

Details

ISSN :
14783231
Volume :
43
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Liver international : official journal of the International Association for the Study of the LiverREFERENCES
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3307f6e2f8ecc9d2fd3b4d557b2b2ffe