One year outcome of intensive care patients with decompensated alcoholic liver disease
- PMID: 16849386
- DOI: 10.1093/bja/ael177
One year outcome of intensive care patients with decompensated alcoholic liver disease
Abstract
Background: We aimed to examine the outcome of patients with decompensated alcoholic liver disease (ALD) admitted to a general intensive care unit (ICU).
Methods: Retrospective observational cohort study of intensive care admissions over a 3 yr period was conducted. The study was set in an ICU in a UK university hospital with a tertiary liver referral unit. One hundred and ten admissions, involving 107 patients, with decompensated ALD were included. Intensive care, hospital, and 6 and 12 months mortality were recorded along with the outcome in diagnostic and organ system support subgroups. Intensive care, hospital, 6 month and 12 month mortality rates were 58, 71, 78 and 81%.
Results: Hospital mortality in the sepsis/multiorgan failure group was 88%. Sixty-nine per cent of patients who were ventilated but required no other organ support survived to hospital discharge. However, the requirement for any other organ support, or a raised creatinine (>120 micromol litre(-1)) in the first 24 h, reduced the hospital survival to <15%. In those patients requiring acute renal replacement therapy, the hospital mortality was 94%.
Conclusion: Decompensated ALD requiring intensive care admission is associated with a high hospital mortality and consideration should be given to the futility of escalating organ support measures, particularly when renal replacement therapy is required.
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
