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Morphometric Age and Mortality After Liver Transplant

Authors :
Lindsay M. Tishberg
Edward K. Kim
Michael J. Englesbe
Kyle H. Sheetz
Stewart C. Wang
Michael N. Terjimanian
Christopher J. Sonnenday
Calista M. Harbaugh
Seth A. Waits
June A. Sullivan
Source :
JAMA Surgery. 149:335
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
American Medical Association (AMA), 2014.

Abstract

Morphometric assessment has emerged as a strong predictor of postoperative morbidity and mortality. However, a gap exists in translating this knowledge to bedside decision making. We introduced a novel measure of patient-centered surgical risk assessment: morphometric age.To investigate the relationship between morphometric age and posttransplant survival.Medical records of recipients of deceased-donor liver transplants (study population) and kidney donors/trauma patients (morphometric age control population).A retrospective cohort study of 348 liver transplant patients and 3313 control patients. We assessed medical records for validated morphometric characteristics of aging (psoas area, psoas density, and abdominal aortic calcification). We created a model (stratified by sex) for a morphometric age equation, which we then calculated for the control population using multivariate linear regression modeling (covariates). These models were then applied to the study population to determine each patient's morphometric age.All analytic steps related to measuring morphometric characteristics were obtained via custom algorithms programmed into commercially available software. An independent observer confirmed all algorithm outputs. Trained assistants performed medical record review to obtain patient characteristics.Cox proportional hazards regression model showed that morphometric age was a significant independent predictor of overall mortality (hazard ratio, 1.03 per morphometric year [95% CI, 1.02-1.04; P .001]) after liver transplant. Chronologic age was not a significant covariate for survival (hazard ratio, 1.02 per year [95% CI, 0.99-1.04; P = .21]). Morphometric age stratified patients at high and low risk for mortality. For example, patients in the middle chronologic age tertile who jumped to the oldest morphometric tertile have worse outcomes than those who jumped to the youngest morphometric tertile (74.4% vs 93.2% survival at 1 year [P = .03]; 45.2% vs 75.0% at 5 years [P = .03]).Morphometric age correlated with mortality after liver transplant with better discrimination than chronologic age. Assigning a morphometric age to potential liver transplant recipients could improve prediction of postoperative mortality risk.

Details

ISSN :
21686254
Volume :
149
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JAMA Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....87fb4ef71049b4bde63ac426f732148f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1001/jamasurg.2013.4823