Renal replacement therapy in critically ill liver cirrhotic patients-outcome and clinical implications

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Renal replacement therapy in critically ill liver cirrhotic patients-outcome and clinical implications. / Staufer, Katharina; Roedl, Kevin; Kivaranovic, Danijel; Drolz, Andreas; Horvatits, Thomas; Rasoul-Rockenschaub, Susanne; Zauner, Christian; Trauner, Michael; Fuhrmann, Valentin.

in: LIVER INT, Jahrgang 37, Nr. 6, 06.2017, S. 843-850.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Staufer, K, Roedl, K, Kivaranovic, D, Drolz, A, Horvatits, T, Rasoul-Rockenschaub, S, Zauner, C, Trauner, M & Fuhrmann, V 2017, 'Renal replacement therapy in critically ill liver cirrhotic patients-outcome and clinical implications', LIVER INT, Jg. 37, Nr. 6, S. 843-850. https://doi.org/10.1111/liv.13389

APA

Staufer, K., Roedl, K., Kivaranovic, D., Drolz, A., Horvatits, T., Rasoul-Rockenschaub, S., Zauner, C., Trauner, M., & Fuhrmann, V. (2017). Renal replacement therapy in critically ill liver cirrhotic patients-outcome and clinical implications. LIVER INT, 37(6), 843-850. https://doi.org/10.1111/liv.13389

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{59384bb774554007bb57e0313147ff3b,
title = "Renal replacement therapy in critically ill liver cirrhotic patients-outcome and clinical implications",
abstract = "BACKGROUND & AIMS: Current guidelines discourage renal replacement therapy (RRT) in critically ill cirrhotics in the lack of liver transplant (LT) options. This study aimed to identify patients who benefit from RRT in the short and long-term.METHODS: Critically ill cirrhotics were included over a time period of 6 years and followed for at least 1 year. CLIF-C ACLF, CLIF-SOFA, SOFA and MELD scores on admission, 24 h prior to RRT, 24 and 48 hours after start of RRT were analysed for their predictive value of ICU-mortality. Additionally, long-term renal recovery and successful bridging to LT was assessed.RESULTS: In total, 40% (78/193) of patients required RRT. ICU-, 28 days-, 90 days-, and 1 year-mortality was 71%, 83%, 91%, and 92%, respectively, and was significantly higher than in patients without need for RRT (4%, 30%, 43%, and 50%), P<.001. CLIF-C ACLF and CLIF - SOFA scores within 24 hours prior to RRT showed good discriminant power to predict ICU-mortality. CLIF-C ACLF calculated 48 hours after commencing RRT was the most suitable predictor of ICU-mortality in RRT-patients irrespective of LT options (AUC: 0.866). In patients with ≥5 organ failure assessed by CLIF-SOFA at any time point showed 100% ICU-mortality. 13% of patients with RRT showed renal recovery; 14% of patients could be bridged to LT.CONCLUSIONS: Mortality in critically ill cirrhotics with need for RRT is substantially high independent of LT options. Only a small proportion showed renal recovery after ICU discharge. CLIF-C ACLF and CLIF-SOFA score may assist in identifying patients who would not benefit from RRT.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Katharina Staufer and Kevin Roedl and Danijel Kivaranovic and Andreas Drolz and Thomas Horvatits and Susanne Rasoul-Rockenschaub and Christian Zauner and Michael Trauner and Valentin Fuhrmann",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2017 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.",
year = "2017",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1111/liv.13389",
language = "English",
volume = "37",
pages = "843--850",
journal = "LIVER INT",
issn = "1478-3223",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Renal replacement therapy in critically ill liver cirrhotic patients-outcome and clinical implications

AU - Staufer, Katharina

AU - Roedl, Kevin

AU - Kivaranovic, Danijel

AU - Drolz, Andreas

AU - Horvatits, Thomas

AU - Rasoul-Rockenschaub, Susanne

AU - Zauner, Christian

AU - Trauner, Michael

AU - Fuhrmann, Valentin

N1 - © 2017 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

PY - 2017/6

Y1 - 2017/6

N2 - BACKGROUND & AIMS: Current guidelines discourage renal replacement therapy (RRT) in critically ill cirrhotics in the lack of liver transplant (LT) options. This study aimed to identify patients who benefit from RRT in the short and long-term.METHODS: Critically ill cirrhotics were included over a time period of 6 years and followed for at least 1 year. CLIF-C ACLF, CLIF-SOFA, SOFA and MELD scores on admission, 24 h prior to RRT, 24 and 48 hours after start of RRT were analysed for their predictive value of ICU-mortality. Additionally, long-term renal recovery and successful bridging to LT was assessed.RESULTS: In total, 40% (78/193) of patients required RRT. ICU-, 28 days-, 90 days-, and 1 year-mortality was 71%, 83%, 91%, and 92%, respectively, and was significantly higher than in patients without need for RRT (4%, 30%, 43%, and 50%), P<.001. CLIF-C ACLF and CLIF - SOFA scores within 24 hours prior to RRT showed good discriminant power to predict ICU-mortality. CLIF-C ACLF calculated 48 hours after commencing RRT was the most suitable predictor of ICU-mortality in RRT-patients irrespective of LT options (AUC: 0.866). In patients with ≥5 organ failure assessed by CLIF-SOFA at any time point showed 100% ICU-mortality. 13% of patients with RRT showed renal recovery; 14% of patients could be bridged to LT.CONCLUSIONS: Mortality in critically ill cirrhotics with need for RRT is substantially high independent of LT options. Only a small proportion showed renal recovery after ICU discharge. CLIF-C ACLF and CLIF-SOFA score may assist in identifying patients who would not benefit from RRT.

AB - BACKGROUND & AIMS: Current guidelines discourage renal replacement therapy (RRT) in critically ill cirrhotics in the lack of liver transplant (LT) options. This study aimed to identify patients who benefit from RRT in the short and long-term.METHODS: Critically ill cirrhotics were included over a time period of 6 years and followed for at least 1 year. CLIF-C ACLF, CLIF-SOFA, SOFA and MELD scores on admission, 24 h prior to RRT, 24 and 48 hours after start of RRT were analysed for their predictive value of ICU-mortality. Additionally, long-term renal recovery and successful bridging to LT was assessed.RESULTS: In total, 40% (78/193) of patients required RRT. ICU-, 28 days-, 90 days-, and 1 year-mortality was 71%, 83%, 91%, and 92%, respectively, and was significantly higher than in patients without need for RRT (4%, 30%, 43%, and 50%), P<.001. CLIF-C ACLF and CLIF - SOFA scores within 24 hours prior to RRT showed good discriminant power to predict ICU-mortality. CLIF-C ACLF calculated 48 hours after commencing RRT was the most suitable predictor of ICU-mortality in RRT-patients irrespective of LT options (AUC: 0.866). In patients with ≥5 organ failure assessed by CLIF-SOFA at any time point showed 100% ICU-mortality. 13% of patients with RRT showed renal recovery; 14% of patients could be bridged to LT.CONCLUSIONS: Mortality in critically ill cirrhotics with need for RRT is substantially high independent of LT options. Only a small proportion showed renal recovery after ICU discharge. CLIF-C ACLF and CLIF-SOFA score may assist in identifying patients who would not benefit from RRT.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1111/liv.13389

DO - 10.1111/liv.13389

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 28211257

VL - 37

SP - 843

EP - 850

JO - LIVER INT

JF - LIVER INT

SN - 1478-3223

IS - 6

ER -