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Markers of inflammation predict survival in newly diagnosed cirrhosis:a prospective registry study

Authors :
Mynster Kronborg, Thit
Webel, Henry
O’Connell, Malene Barfod
Danielsen, Karen Vagner
Hobolth, Lise
Møller, Søren
Jensen, Rasmus Tanderup
Bendtsen, Flemming
Hansen, Torben
Rasmussen, Simon
Juel, Helene Bæk
Kimer, Nina
Mynster Kronborg, Thit
Webel, Henry
O’Connell, Malene Barfod
Danielsen, Karen Vagner
Hobolth, Lise
Møller, Søren
Jensen, Rasmus Tanderup
Bendtsen, Flemming
Hansen, Torben
Rasmussen, Simon
Juel, Helene Bæk
Kimer, Nina
Source :
Mynster Kronborg , T , Webel , H , O’Connell , M B , Danielsen , K V , Hobolth , L , Møller , S , Jensen , R T , Bendtsen , F , Hansen , T , Rasmussen , S , Juel , H B & Kimer , N 2023 , ' Markers of inflammation predict survival in newly diagnosed cirrhosis : a prospective registry study ' , Scientific Reports , vol. 13 , 20039 .
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The inflammatory activity in cirrhosis is often pronounced and related to episodes of decompensation. Systemic markers of inflammation may contain prognostic information, and we investigated their possible correlation with admissions and mortality among patients with newly diagnosed liver cirrhosis. We collected plasma samples from 149 patients with newly diagnosed (within the past 6 months) cirrhosis, and registered deaths and hospital admissions within 180 days. Ninety-two inflammatory markers were quantified and correlated with clinical variables, mortality, and admissions. Prediction models were calculated by logistic regression. We compared the disease courses of our cohort with a validation cohort of 86 patients with cirrhosis. Twenty of 92 markers of inflammation correlated significantly with mortality within 180 days (q-values of 0.00–0.044), whereas we found no significant correlations with liver-related admissions. The logistic regression models yielded AUROCs of 0.73 to 0.79 for mortality and 0.61 to 0.73 for liver-related admissions, based on a variety of modalities (clinical variables, inflammatory markers, clinical scores, or combinations thereof). The models performed moderately well in the validation cohort and were better able to predict mortality than liver-related admissions. In conclusion, markers of inflammation can be used to predict 180-day mortality in patients with newly diagnosed cirrhosis. Prediction models for newly diagnosed cirrhotic patients need further validation before implementation in clinical practice.<br />The inflammatory activity in cirrhosis is often pronounced and related to episodes of decompensation. Systemic markers of inflammation may contain prognostic information, and we investigated their possible correlation with admissions and mortality among patients with newly diagnosed liver cirrhosis. We collected plasma samples from 149 patients with newly diagnosed (within the past 6 months) cirrhosis, and registered deaths and hospital admissions within 180 days. Ninety-two inflammatory markers were quantified and correlated with clinical variables, mortality, and admissions. Prediction models were calculated by logistic regression. We compared the disease courses of our cohort with a validation cohort of 86 patients with cirrhosis. Twenty of 92 markers of inflammation correlated significantly with mortality within 180 days (q-values of 0.00–0.044), whereas we found no significant correlations with liver-related admissions. The logistic regression models yielded AUROCs of 0.73 to 0.79 for mortality and 0.61 to 0.73 for liver-related admissions, based on a variety of modalities (clinical variables, inflammatory markers, clinical scores, or combinations thereof). The models performed moderately well in the validation cohort and were better able to predict mortality than liver-related admissions. In conclusion, markers of inflammation can be used to predict 180-day mortality in patients with newly diagnosed cirrhosis. Prediction models for newly diagnosed cirrhotic patients need further validation before implementation in clinical practice. Trial registration: NCT04422223 (and NCT03443934 for the validation cohort), and Scientific Ethics Committee No.: H-19024348.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Mynster Kronborg , T , Webel , H , O’Connell , M B , Danielsen , K V , Hobolth , L , Møller , S , Jensen , R T , Bendtsen , F , Hansen , T , Rasmussen , S , Juel , H B & Kimer , N 2023 , ' Markers of inflammation predict survival in newly diagnosed cirrhosis : a prospective registry study ' , Scientific Reports , vol. 13 , 20039 .
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1439551999
Document Type :
Electronic Resource