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. 2019 Jul;50(1):75-83.
doi: 10.1111/apt.15279. Epub 2019 May 14.

The prognostic impact of cirrhosis on patients receiving maintenance haemodialysis

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The prognostic impact of cirrhosis on patients receiving maintenance haemodialysis

Florent Artru et al. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2019 Jul.

Abstract

Background: Further study is needed on the prognostic impact of cirrhosis on haemodialysis patients.

Aim: To evaluate cirrhosis' impact according to severity on survival and to provide therapeutic guidelines for haemodialysis cirrhotic patients.

Methods: Patients with end-stage renal failure treated with haemodialysis were included retrospectively from 01/01/2000 to 31/12/2004 and prospectively from 01/01/2005 to 31/12/2014 in our French Region. Clinical data, presence of cirrhosis and its severity were recorded at the beginning of haemodialysis. The primary endpoint was 2-year survival.

Results: Seven thousand three hundred and fifty-four patients (96%) without cirrhosis and 304 patients (4%) with cirrhosis were included. Two-year survival in noncirrhotic patients was higher than in cirrhotic patients (71.7% vs 54.4%, P < 0.0001). Patients with decompensated cirrhosis had a worse 2-year outcome (44.1%) as compared to compensated cirrhotic (62.8%, P = 0.002) and noncirrhotic patients (71.7%, P < 0.0001). Compensated and decompensated cirrhosis were independent predictive factors of 2-year mortality. In sensitivity analysis restricted to cirrhotic patients, 2-year survival of Child-Pugh A patients was higher than in Child-Pugh B and C patients (65.5% vs 27.7% vs 0%, P < 0.0001). Development of predictive models based either on severity scores (MELD and Child-Pugh) and extrahepatic comorbidities allowed correct classification of around 70% of patients in terms of mortality and may help to better stratify mortality risk in this population.

Conclusions: Cirrhosis is independently associated with mortality in haemodialysis patients. Patients with severe cirrhosis have a poor 2-year outcome. Severity of cirrhosis and presence of extrahepatic comorbidities should be considered when deciding to initiate renal replacement therapy.

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