Back to Search Start Over

A home-based, multidisciplinary liver optimisation programme for the first 28 days after an admission for acute-on-chronic liver failure (LivR well): a study protocol for a randomised controlled trial

Authors :
Ngu, NLY
Saxby, E
Worland, T
Anderson, P
Stothers, L
Figredo, A
Hunter, J
Elford, A
Ha, P
Hartley, I
Roberts, A
Seah, D
Tambakis, G
Liew, D
Rogers, B
Sievert, W
Bell, S
Le, S
Ngu, NLY
Saxby, E
Worland, T
Anderson, P
Stothers, L
Figredo, A
Hunter, J
Elford, A
Ha, P
Hartley, I
Roberts, A
Seah, D
Tambakis, G
Liew, D
Rogers, B
Sievert, W
Bell, S
Le, S
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) represents a rising global healthcare burden, characterised by increasing prevalence among patients with decompensated cirrhosis who have a 28-day transplantation-free mortality of 33.9%. Due to disease complexity and a high prevalence of socio-economic disadvantage, there are deficits in quality of care and adherence to guideline-based treatment in this cohort. Compared to other chronic conditions such as heart failure, those with liver disease have reduced access to integrated ambulatory care services. The LivR Well programme is a multidisciplinary intervention aimed at improving 28-day mortality and reducing 30-day readmission through a home-based, liver optimisation programme implemented in the first 28 days after an admission with either ACLF or hepatic decompensation. Outcomes from our feasibility study suggest that the intervention is safe and acceptable to patients and carers. METHODS: We will recruit adult patients with chronic liver disease from the emergency departments, in-patient admissions, and an ambulatory liver clinic of a multi-site quaternary health service in Melbourne, Australia. A total of 120 patients meeting EF-Clif criteria will be recruited to the ACLF arm, and 320 patients to the hepatic decompensation arm. Participants in each cohort will be randomised to the intervention arm, a 28-day multidisciplinary programme or to standard ambulatory care in a 1:1 ratio. The intervention arm includes access to nursing, pharmacy, physiotherapy, dietetics, social work, and neuropsychiatry clinicians. For the ACLF cohort, the primary outcome is 28-day mortality. For the hepatic decompensation cohort, the primary outcome is 30-day re-admission. Secondary outcomes assess changes in liver disease severity and quality of life. An interim analysis will be performed at 50% recruitment to consider early cessation of the trial if the intervention is superior to the control, as suggested in our feasibility study.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1373000462
Document Type :
Electronic Resource