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Anemia and Systemic Inflammation Rather than Arterial Circulatory Dysfunction Predict Decompensation of Liver Cirrhosis

Bothou, Christina; Rüschenbaum, Sabrina; Kubesch, Alica; Quenstedt, Leonie; Schwarzkopf, Katharina; Welsch, Christoph; Zeuzem, Stefan; Welzel, Tania Mara; Lange, Christian Markus (2020). Anemia and Systemic Inflammation Rather than Arterial Circulatory Dysfunction Predict Decompensation of Liver Cirrhosis. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 9(5):1263.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

While systemic inflammation is recognized as playing a central role in the pathogenesis of organ failures in patients with liver cirrhosis, less is known about its relevance in the development of classical hepatic decompensation.

AIM

To characterize the relationship between systemic inflammation, hemodynamics, and anemia with decompensation of liver cirrhosis.

METHODS

This is a post-hoc analysis of a cohort study of outpatients with advanced liver fibrosis or cirrhosis.

RESULTS

Analysis included 338 patients of whom 51 patients (15%) were hospitalized due to decompensation of liver cirrhosis during a median follow-up time of six months. In univariate analysis, active alcoholism (p = 0.002), model of end-stage liver disease (MELD) score (p = 0.00002), serum IL-6 concentration (p = 0.006), heart rate (p = 0.03), low arterial blood pressure (p < 0.05), maximal portal venous flow (p = 0.008), and low hemoglobin concentration (p < 0.00001) were associated with hospitalization during follow-up. Multivariate analysis revealed an independent association of low hemoglobin (OR = 0.62, 95% CI = 0.51-0.78, p = 0.001) and serum IL-6 concentration (OR = 1.02, 95% CI = 1.01-1.04, p = 0.03)-but not of hemodynamic parameters-with hepatic decompensation. An inverse correlation between hemoglobin concentration and portal venous flow (R = -0.362, p < 0.0001) was detected for the non-hospitalized patients. Accuracy of baseline hemoglobin levels for predicting hospitalization (AUC = 0.84, p < 0.000001) was high.

CONCLUSION

Anemia and systemic inflammation, rather than arterial circulatory dysfunction, are strong and independent predictors of hepatic decompensation in outpatients with liver cirrhosis.

Additional indexing

Item Type:Journal Article, refereed, original work
Communities & Collections:04 Faculty of Medicine > University Hospital Zurich > Clinic for Endocrinology and Diabetology
Dewey Decimal Classification:610 Medicine & health
Scopus Subject Areas:Health Sciences > General Medicine
Language:English
Date:26 April 2020
Deposited On:27 Oct 2021 13:36
Last Modified:14 Mar 2025 04:42
Publisher:MDPI Publishing
ISSN:2077-0383
OA Status:Gold
Free access at:Publisher DOI. An embargo period may apply.
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm9051263
PubMed ID:32357568
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