The Curative Effect of ALSS on 1-month Mortality in AoCLF Patients after 72 to 120 Hours

Author:

Chen Y.-S.1,Wu Z.-W.1,He J.-Q.1,Yu J.1,Yang S.-G.1,Zhang Y.-M.1,Du W.-B.1,Cao H.-C.1,Li L.-J.1

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Infectious Diseases, The First Affiliated Hospital, School of Medicine, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, Zhejiang - China

Abstract

Background Hepatitis B virus (HBV)-related acute-on-chronic liver failure (AoCLF) is associated with a high mortality rate. An artificial liver support system (ALSS) creates a better environment for the self-regeneration of retained hepatocytes. Aim and Patients We investigated the curative effect of ALSS on 1-month mortality at 72–120 h post-ALSS in 289 AoCLF patients. Methods Of the 289 patients, 117 who survived for at least 1 month post-ALSS comprised the survival group; the remaining cases who died within 1 month served as controls. The improvements in laboratory data and clinical syndromes at 72–120 h post-ALSS were compared with those at 24 h. Results Total bilirubin, international normalized ratio, and creatinine levels, and encephalopathy were significantly improved at 24 h post-ALSS in both the groups (p<0.05); however, these variables showed deterioration at 72–120 h; a rebound occurred in the nonsurvivors (p>0.05). The improvements in these variables in the nonsurvivors were considerably smaller than those in the survivors (p<0.05), particularly at 72–120 h. One-month mortality was more accurately predicted by the logistic regression model at 72–120 h than at 24 h. Conclusions The prognosis of AoCLF patients was highly dependent on the improvement in encephalopathy, total bilirubin, international normalized ratio, and creatinine levels at 72–120 h post-ALSS. These variables are useful, therefore, as disease severity indexes to determine organ allocation priorities for liver transplant.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Biomedical Engineering,Biomaterials,General Medicine,Medicine (miscellaneous),Bioengineering

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