On-treatment serum albumin level can guide long-term treatment in patients with cirrhosis and uncomplicated ascites
- PMID: 32853747
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jhep.2020.08.021
On-treatment serum albumin level can guide long-term treatment in patients with cirrhosis and uncomplicated ascites
Abstract
Background & aims: The ANSWER study reported that long-term albumin administration in patients with cirrhosis and uncomplicated ascites improves survival. During treatment, serum albumin increased within a month and remained stable thereafter. In this post hoc analysis, we aimed to determine whether on-treatment serum albumin levels could guide therapy.
Methods: Logistic regression was used to assess the association between baseline serum albumin and mortality, as well as to determine on-treatment factors associated with mortality and to predict the achievement of a given on-treatment serum albumin level. Survival was assessed by Kaplan-Meier estimates and second-order polynomial regression. Patients whose on-treatment serum albumin remained below normal were compared with a subset of patients from the control arm matched by principal score.
Results: Baseline serum albumin was closely associated with 18-month mortality in untreated patients; albumin treatment almost effaced this relationship. On-treatment serum albumin and MELD-Na at month 1 were the sole independent variables associated with mortality. Second-order polynomial regression revealed that survival improved in parallel with increased 1-month on-treatment serum albumin. Kaplan-Meier estimations showed that any value of 1-month on-treatment serum albumin (0.1 g/dl intervals) in the range 2.5-4.5 g/dl discriminated patient survival. In the normal range of serum albumin, the best discriminant value was 4.0 g/dl. Compared to untreated patients, survival even improved in patients whose on-treatment serum albumin remained below normal.
Conclusion: Baseline serum albumin per se should not guide the decision to start albumin therapy. Conversely, 1-month on-treatment serum albumin levels are strongly associated with outcomes and could guide the use of albumin - 4.0 g/dl being the target threshold. However, even patients whose serum albumin remains below normal benefit from long-term albumin administration.
Lay summary: The ANSWER study has shown that long-term albumin administration improves survival and prevents the occurrence of major complications in patients with cirrhosis and ascites. This study shows that the achievement of these beneficial effects is related to a significant increase in serum albumin concentration. Even though the best results follow the achievement of a serum albumin concentration of 4 g/dl, a survival benefit is also achieved in patients who fail to normalise serum albumin.
Keywords: Ascites; Cirrhosis; Complications; Serum albumin; Survival.
Copyright © 2020 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Conflict of interest PC is part of the speakers' bureau for Grifols SA, Octapharma AG, Baxalta, and Kedrion Biopharma, is consultant for Kedrion Biopharma, is on the advisory board for Grifols SA, and has a research grant from Octapharma AG. MT is part of the speakers' bureau for Grifols SA and Octapharma AG. GZ is part of the speakers' bureau for Octapharma. OR is part of speakers' bureau for Baxalta. PA is part of the speakers' bureau for Baxalta and Kedrion Biopharma. PT is part of the speakers' bureau for Grifols and Kedrion Biopharma. MBa is part of the speakers' bureau Octapharma AG. MBe is part of the speakers' bureau for Grifols SA, Octapharma AG, Baxalta, CLS Behring GmbH, and PPTA, and is a consultant for CLS Behring GmbH, Grifols SA and Baxalta. All other authors have no competing interests. Please refer to the accompanying ICMJE disclosure forms for further details.
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