Saffouri Eliana, Lim Eugénie S, Kim Susan W, Hakendorf Paul, Thompson Campbell H
Department of Gastroenterology, Forth Valley Royal Hospital, NHS Forth Valley, Lambert, Scotland, UK.
Department of Medicine, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Frontline Gastroenterol. 2016 Oct;7(4):234-239. doi: 10.1136/flgastro-2015-100669. Epub 2016 Mar 8.
To determine whether short-term changes in liver tests (bilirubin, albumin, gamma glutamyl transferase, alkaline phosphatase, alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and aspartate aminotransferase) predict 12-month mortality and, if so, which test is most informative.
Retrospective review of general medicine inpatients at a tertiary hospital (2005-2012) identified non-elective admissions of minimum 7 days' duration. Patients with liver disease, malignancy, admission to the intensive care unit or inpatient mortality were excluded. Linear spline modelled the vector of intra-admission change from admission. The association between 12-month mortality and admission and intra-admission changes in liver tests was assessed by logistic regression modelling, adjusted for age, gender, comorbidity index and heart failure.
12-month mortality was 17% in 4160 patients analysed. 12-month mortality for patients with abnormally low albumin at admission was 5% higher per 1 g/L below 34 g/L (OR 0.95, 95% CI 0.93 to 0.98, p<0.001). Albumin and ALT were the only tests for which an intra-admission change significantly predicted mortality; the predictive effects were additive. 12-month mortality was greater by 4% per 1 g/L intra-admission decrement in albumin (OR 1.04, 95% CI 1.02 to 1.06, p<0.001) and 6% per 100 IU/L intra-admission increment in ALT (OR 1.06, 95% CI 1.02 to 1.1, p=0.005). Intra-admission changes were superior to admission values in predicting mortality.
Changes in liver tests predict long-term mortality better than a single value and provide prognostic information more quickly than long-term monitoring. In the absence of known liver disease, albumin predicts long-term mortality better than transaminases. The patient whose albumin decreases in the short term is at high risk of death within 1 year, even from a normal baseline.
确定肝功能检查(胆红素、白蛋白、γ-谷氨酰转移酶、碱性磷酸酶、丙氨酸氨基转移酶(ALT)和天冬氨酸氨基转移酶)的短期变化是否可预测12个月死亡率,若可以,则确定哪种检查最具信息量。
对一家三级医院(2005 - 2012年)普通内科住院患者进行回顾性研究,确定非选择性住院时间至少7天的患者。排除患有肝病、恶性肿瘤、入住重症监护病房或住院期间死亡的患者。线性样条模型模拟入院期间入院时的变化向量。通过逻辑回归模型评估12个月死亡率与入院时及入院期间肝功能检查变化之间的关联,并对年龄、性别、合并症指数和心力衰竭进行校正。
在分析的4160例患者中,12个月死亡率为17%。入院时白蛋白异常低的患者,每低于34 g/L 1 g/L,12个月死亡率高出5%(比值比0.95,95%置信区间0.93至0.98,p<0.001)。白蛋白和ALT是仅有的入院期间变化可显著预测死亡率的检查;预测作用是累加的。入院期间白蛋白每降低1 g/L,12个月死亡率增加4%(比值比1.04,95%置信区间1.02至1.06,p<0.001),入院期间ALT每升高100 IU/L,12个月死亡率增加6%(比值比1.06,95%置信区间1.02至1.1,p = 0.005)。入院期间的变化在预测死亡率方面优于入院时的值。
肝功能检查的变化比单一值更能预测长期死亡率,并且比长期监测能更快地提供预后信息。在无已知肝病的情况下,白蛋白比转氨酶更能预测长期死亡率。短期内白蛋白降低的患者在1年内死亡风险高,即使基线正常。