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Outcomes following SARS-CoV-2 infection in patients with chronic liver disease: An international registry study

Authors :
European Association for the Study of the Liver
National Institutes of Health (US)
North Carolina State University
National Institute for Health Research (UK)
National Health Service (UK)
Marjot, Thomas
Moon, Andrew M.
Cook, Jonathan A.
Abd-Elsalam, Sherief
Aloman, Costica
Armstrong, Matthew J.
Pose, Elisa
Brenner, Erica J.
Cargill, Tamsin
Catana, Maria-Andreea
Dhanasekaran, Renumathy
Eshraghian, Ahad
García-Juárez, Ignacio
Gill, Upkar S.
Jones, Patricia D.
Kennedy, James
Marshall, Aileen
Matthews, Charmaine
Mells, George
Mercer, Carolyn
Perumalswami, Ponni V.
Avitabile, Emma
Qi, Xialong
Su, Feng
Ufere, Nneka N.
Wong, Yu Jun
Zheng, Ming-Hua
Barnes, Eleanor
Barritt, Alfred S.
Webb, Gwilym J.
European Association for the Study of the Liver
National Institutes of Health (US)
North Carolina State University
National Institute for Health Research (UK)
National Health Service (UK)
Marjot, Thomas
Moon, Andrew M.
Cook, Jonathan A.
Abd-Elsalam, Sherief
Aloman, Costica
Armstrong, Matthew J.
Pose, Elisa
Brenner, Erica J.
Cargill, Tamsin
Catana, Maria-Andreea
Dhanasekaran, Renumathy
Eshraghian, Ahad
García-Juárez, Ignacio
Gill, Upkar S.
Jones, Patricia D.
Kennedy, James
Marshall, Aileen
Matthews, Charmaine
Mells, George
Mercer, Carolyn
Perumalswami, Ponni V.
Avitabile, Emma
Qi, Xialong
Su, Feng
Ufere, Nneka N.
Wong, Yu Jun
Zheng, Ming-Hua
Barnes, Eleanor
Barritt, Alfred S.
Webb, Gwilym J.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background & Aims: Chronic liver disease (CLD) and cirrhosis are associated with immune dysregulation, leading to concerns that affected patients may be at risk of adverse outcomes following SARS-CoV-2 infection. We aimed to determine the impact of COVID-19 on patients with pre-existing liver disease, which currently remains ill-defined. Methods: Between 25th March and 8th July 2020, data on 745 patients with CLD and SARS-CoV-2 (including 386 with and 359 without cirrhosis) were collected by 2 international registries and compared to data on non-CLD patients with SARS-CoV-2 from a UK hospital network. Results: Mortality was 32% in patients with cirrhosis compared to 8% in those without (p <0.001). Mortality in patients with cirrhosis increased according to Child-Pugh class (A [19%], B [35%], C [51%]) and the main cause of death was from respiratory failure (71%). After adjusting for baseline characteristics, factors associated with death in the total CLD cohort were age (odds ratio [OR] 1.02; 1.01–1.04), Child-Pugh A (OR 1.90; 1.03–3.52), B (OR 4.14; 2.4–7.65), or C (OR 9.32; 4.80–18.08) cirrhosis and alcohol-related liver disease (OR 1.79; 1.03–3.13). Compared to patients without CLD (n = 620), propensity-score-matched analysis revealed significant increases in mortality in those with Child-Pugh B (+20.0% [8.8%–31.3%]) and C (+38.1% [27.1%–49.2%]) cirrhosis. Acute hepatic decompensation occurred in 46% of patients with cirrhosis, of whom 21% had no respiratory symptoms. Half of those with hepatic decompensation had acute-on-chronic liver failure. Conclusions: In the largest such cohort to date, we demonstrate that baseline liver disease stage and alcohol-related liver disease are independent risk factors for death from COVID-19. These data have important implications for the risk stratification of patients with CLD across the globe during the COVID-19 pandemic. Lay summary: This international registry study demonstrates that patients with cirrhosis are at increased

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1306016989
Document Type :
Electronic Resource