Dallas VA Medical Center, Dallas, TX.
Baylor University Medical Center, Dallas, TX.
Hepatology. 2018 Jun;67(6):2367-2374. doi: 10.1002/hep.29773. Epub 2018 Apr 19.
The North American Consortium for the Study of End-Stage Liver Disease's definition of acute-on-chronic liver failure (NACSELD-ACLF) as two or more extrahepatic organ failures has been proposed as a simple bedside tool to assess the risk of mortality in hospitalized patients with cirrhosis. We validated the NACSELD-ACLF's ability to predict 30-day survival (defined as in-hospital death or hospice discharge) in a separate multicenter prospectively enrolled cohort of both infected and uninfected hospitalized patients with cirrhosis. We used the NACSELD database of 14 tertiary care hepatology centers that prospectively enrolled nonelective hospitalized patients with cirrhosis (n = 2,675). The cohort was randomly split 60%/40% into training (n = 1,605) and testing (n = 1,070) groups. Organ failures assessed were (1) shock, (2) hepatic encephalopathy (grade III/IV), (3) renal (need for dialysis), and (4) respiratory (mechanical ventilation). Patients were most commonly Caucasian (79%) men (62%) with a mean age of 57 years and a diagnosis of alcohol-induced cirrhosis (45%), and 1,079 patients had an infection during hospitalization. The mean Model for End-Stage Liver Disease score was 19, and the median Child score was 10. No demographic differences were present between the two split groups. Multivariable modeling revealed that the NACSELD-ACLF score, as determined by number of organ failures, was the strongest predictor of decreased survival after controlling for admission age, white blood cell count, serum albumin, Model for End-Stage Liver Disease score, and presence of infection. The c-statistics were 0.8073 for the training set and 0.8532 for the validation set.
Although infection status remains an important predictor of death, NACSELD-ACLF was independently validated in a separate large multinational prospective cohort as a simple, reliable bedside tool to predict 30-day survival in both infected and uninfected patients hospitalized with a diagnosis of cirrhosis. (Hepatology 2018;67:2367-2374).
北美终末期肝病研究联盟(NACSELD)将慢加急性肝衰竭(ACLF)定义为两种或多种肝外器官衰竭,被提议作为一种简单的床边工具,用于评估住院肝硬化患者的死亡率风险。我们验证了 NACSELD-ACLF 在另一个独立的多中心前瞻性纳入感染和未感染住院肝硬化患者队列中预测 30 天生存率(定义为院内死亡或临终关怀出院)的能力。我们使用了前瞻性纳入非选择性住院肝硬化患者(n=2675 例)的 14 个三级保健肝病中心的 NACSELD 数据库。队列随机分为 60%/40%的训练(n=1605)和测试(n=1070)组。评估的器官衰竭包括:(1)休克,(2)肝性脑病(III/IV 级),(3)肾功能衰竭(需要透析)和(4)呼吸功能衰竭(机械通气)。患者最常见的是白种人(79%)男性(62%),平均年龄 57 岁,酒精性肝硬化诊断(45%),1079 例患者在住院期间发生感染。终末期肝病模型评分的平均值为 19,儿童评分的中位数为 10。两组之间没有明显的人口统计学差异。多变量模型显示,在控制入院年龄、白细胞计数、血清白蛋白、终末期肝病模型评分和感染存在的情况下,NACSELD-ACLF 评分(由器官衰竭数量决定)是预测生存率下降的最强预测因素。训练组的 C 统计量为 0.8073,验证组为 0.8532。
尽管感染状况仍然是死亡的一个重要预测因素,但 NACSELD-ACLF 在另一个独立的大型多国前瞻性队列中得到了验证,作为一种简单、可靠的床边工具,可以预测诊断为肝硬化的感染和未感染患者的 30 天生存率。(《肝脏病学》2018 年;67:2367-2374)