Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
1,124
result(s) for
"Liver Cirrhosis, Alcoholic - diagnosis"
Sort by:
Antifibrotic and molecular aspects of rifaximin in alcoholic liver disease: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
by
Arumugan, Manimozhiyan
,
Havelund, Troels
,
Israelsen, Mads
in
Alcohol
,
Alcoholic liver disease
,
Anti-Bacterial Agents - adverse effects
2018
Background
Alcoholic liver disease is the leading cause of cirrhosis worldwide. Due to an increase in alcohol overuse, alcoholic liver disease has become an increased burden on health care systems. Abstinence from alcohol remains the cornerstone of alcoholic liver disease treatment; however, this approach is hampered by frequent relapse and lack of specific therapy for treating advanced cases of liver disease. In the present study, we hypothesized that gut microbiota drive the development of liver fibrosis and that modulation of gut microbiota with the gut-selective, nonabsorbable antibiotic rifaximin attenuates alcoholic liver fibrosis.
Methods/design
Our double-blind, placebo-controlled trial will include 136 participants with biopsy-verified alcoholic fibrosis (Ishak liver fibrosis score of 1–4). Participants are randomized 1:1 to receive placebo or 550 mg of rifaximin twice daily for 18 months. A liver biopsy will be performed at the end of the treatment period to evaluate the effect of drug treatment on liver fibrosis. Stool, urine, and saliva specimens will be collected before treatment begins, at 1 month, and at the end of the treatment period. Fecal samples are used for microbiome deep sequencing. Changes in microbiome composition are compared before and after the trial medication period and linked to changes in liver fibrosis.
Discussion
This is the first clinical trial to evaluate the effect of gut microbiota on liver fibrosis in humans. If gut microbiota are an important promoter of alcoholic liver disease, current results may open new therapeutic avenues and revolutionize the current understanding of chronic liver diseases.
Trial registration
EudraCT,
2014–001856-51
. Registered on 16 August 2014.
Journal Article
Bile cast nephropathy is a common pathologic finding for kidney injury associated with severe liver dysfunction
2013
Cholemic nephrosis represents a spectrum of renal injury from proximal tubulopathy to intrarenal bile cast formation found in patients with severe liver dysfunction. However, the contribution of this diagnosis has been largely forgotten in the modern literature. To more precisely define this, we conducted a clinicopathologic study of 44 subjects (41 autopsies and 3 renal biopsies) from jaundiced patients at the University of Chicago. Of these, 24 patients had bile casts with involvement of distal nephron segments in 18 mild cases and extension to proximal tubules for 6 severe cases. Eleven of 13 patients with hepatorenal syndrome and all 10 with cirrhosis (due to alcoholism) had tubular bile casts. These casts significantly correlated with higher serum total and direct bilirubin levels, and a trend toward higher serum creatinine, AST, and ALT levels. Bile casts may contribute to the kidney injury of severely jaundiced patients by direct bile and bilirubin toxicity, and tubular obstruction. Both mechanisms are analogous to the injury by myeloma or myoglobin casts. Accounting for the presence of renal bile casts provides a more complete representation of the renal injury that can occur in this unique clinical setting. Thus, bile cast nephropathy is an appropriate term for the severe form of injury observed in the spectrum of cholemic nephrosis. Additional studies are needed to establish the significance of this parameter for patient management in different clinical settings.
Journal Article
Reproducibility of transient elastography in the evaluation of liver fibrosis in patients with chronic liver disease
2007
Objective: Transient elastography (TE) is gaining popularity as a non-invasive method for predicting liver fibrosis, but intraobserver and interobserver agreement and factors influencing TE reproducibility have not been adequately assessed. This study investigated these aspects. Setting: Tertiary referral liver unit. Patients: Over a 4-month period, 200 patients with chronic liver disease (CLD) with varying aetiology consecutively underwent TE and liver biopsy. Interventions: TE was performed twice by two different operators either concomitantly or within 3 days of the bioptic procedure (METAVIR classification). Main outcome measures: Intraobserver and interobserver agreement were analysed using the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) and correlated with different patient-related and liver disease-related covariates. Results: 800 TE examinations were performed, with an indeterminate result rate of 2.4%. The overall interobserver agreement ICC was 0.98 (95% CI 0.977 to 0.987). Increased body mass index (>25 kg/m2), steatosis, and low staging grades (fibrosis (F) stage <2) were significantly associated with reduced ICC (p<0.05). Intraobserver agreement ICC was 0.98 for both raters. Using receiver operating characteristic curves, three diagnostic TE thresholds were identified: >7.9 kPa for F⩾2, >10.3 for F⩾3 and >11.9 for F = 4. TE values assessed by the two raters fell within the same cut-off of fibrosis in 88% of the cases for F⩾2, in 92% for F⩾3 and 91% for F = 4. Conclusions: TE is a highly reproducible and user-friendly technique for assessing liver fibrosis in patients with CLD. However, because TE reproducibility is significantly reduced (p<0.05) in patients with steatosis, increased BMI and lower degrees of hepatic fibrosis, caution is warranted in the clinical use of TE as a surrogate for liver biopsy.
Journal Article
A scoring system for predicting hepatocellular carcinoma risk in alcoholic cirrhosis
by
Choi, Gwang Hyeon
,
Jang, Eun Sun
,
Jeong, Sook-Hyang
in
692/4020/4021/1607/1608
,
692/4020/4021/1607/1610/4029
,
Adult
2022
The role of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) surveillance is being questioned in alcoholic cirrhosis because of the relative low HCC risk. This study aimed to assess the risk and predictors of HCC in Korean patients with alcoholic cirrhosis by using competing risk analysis. A total of 745 patients with alcoholic cirrhosis were recruited at a university-affiliated hospital in Korea and randomly assigned to either the derivation (n = 507) and validation (n = 238) cohort. Subdistribution hazards model of Fine and Gray was used with deaths and liver transplantation treated as competing risks. Death records were confirmed from Korean government databases. A nomogram was developed to calculate the Alcohol-associated Liver Cancer Estimation (ALICE) score. The cumulative incidence of HCC was 15.3 and 13.3% at 10 years for derivation and validation cohort, respectively. Age, alpha-fetoprotein level, and albumin level were identified as independent predictors of HCC and incorporated in the ALICE score, which discriminated low, intermediate, and high risk for HCC in alcoholic cirrhosis at the cut-off of 60 and 100. The risk of HCC can be stratified by using a combination of readily available clinical parameters (age, AFP level, and albumin level) in patients with alcoholic cirrhosis.
Journal Article
Theragnostic Efficacy of K18 Response in Alcohol Use Disorder with Clinically Significant Fibrosis Using Gut-Liver Axis
2022
(1) Background: Fibrosis in early-stage alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD) is commonly under-diagnosed in routine clinical practice. This study characterized the liver-injury and cell death response in alcohol use disorder (AUD) patients with ALD who also exhibited fibrosis and assessed the efficacy of standard of care (SOC) treatment in the improvement in liver injury. (2) Methods: Forty-eight heavy-drinking AUD patients aged 21–65 yrs. without clinical manifestations of liver injury were grouped by Fibrosis-4 (FIB-4) score, as negative (Gr.1 < 1.45, n = 21) or positive (Gr.2 ≥ 1.45, n = 27). Patients received 2-weeks (2 w) inpatient SOC. Data on demographics, drinking patterns, liver-injury, immune markers, and liver cell death (K18s) markers were analyzed at baseline (BL) and after 2 w SOC. (3) Results: Lifetime drinking (LTDH, yrs.) and acute heavy drinking (Heavy Drinking Days Past 90 Days [HDD90]) markers were significantly higher in Gr.2 vs. Gr.1. BL ALT, AST, AST:ALT and K18M65 were considerably higher in Gr.2. Dysregulated gut dysfunction and elevated immune activity were evident in Gr.2 characterized by TNF-α, IL-8 and LPS levels. After SOC, Gr.2 showed improvement in AST, ALT, AST/ALT ratio; and in the K18M65, K18M30 and K18M65/M30 ratio vs. Gr.1. The true positivity of BL IL-8 response to predict the improvement in K18M65 to normal levels among Gr.2 patients against those who did not have improvement after 2 w SOC was very high (AUROC = 0.830, p = 0.042). (4) Conclusions: Gut dysfunction, elevated cytokine response and necrotic liver cell death were elevated in AUD patients with early-stage ALD. K18 showed promise as a predictive theragnostic factor to differentiate among the AUD patients with early-stage ALD and baseline fibrosis who had improvement in liver injury against those who did not, by the levels of baseline IL-8.
Journal Article
Health disparities in time to diagnosis and survival post-diagnosis of cirrhosis in individuals with alcohol use disorder: A retrospective cohort study
2024
This study investigates the impact of race, gender, and ethnicity on the progression from diagnosis to cirrhosis and subsequent survival in patients with alcohol use disorder, with a specific focus on identifying potential disparities in health outcomes.
Employing a STROBE-compliant, retrospective cohort design, we analyzed data from patients diagnosed with alcohol use disorder from January 2000 to December 2022, using the University of California Health Data Warehouse. We estimated survival functions using the Kaplan–Meier method and assessed demographic associations using both bivariate and multivariate Cox proportional hazards models.
The analysis highlighted a significant association between Hispanic ethnicity and an accelerated timeline for both the diagnosis of alcohol-related cirrhosis following diagnosis of alcohol use disorder and mortality post-cirrhosis diagnosis. The former was evident only in bivariate analysis, but the latter association persisted in multivariate analysis. Gender did not demonstrate a significant correlation with the time to these outcomes, though multiracial identification emerged as a protective factor.
The study reveals critical health disparities in the progression and outcomes of cirrhosis, particularly between Hispanic and non-Hispanic patients. These findings underscore the urgent need for targeted healthcare interventions and policies that address these disparities. Future research should delve deeper into the multifaceted factors influencing these outcomes, facilitating the development of more nuanced and effective prevention and treatment strategies for alcohol use disorder and its severe complications.
•This study utilizes a STROBE-compliant, retrospective analysis of a large, diverse patient population.•Hispanic ethnicity is a key risk factor for faster progression to cirrhosis in patients with alcohol use disorder.•Following cirrhosis diagnosis, Hispanic patients had significantly shorter survival than non-Hispanic patients.•This study underscores the need for targeted healthcare strategies to address ethnic disparities in alcohol use disorder.
Journal Article
28-day all-cause mortality in patients with alcoholic cirrhosis: a machine learning prediction model based on the MIMIC-IV
2025
To develop and validate a machine learning prediction model for 28-day all-cause mortality in patients with alcoholic cirrhosis using data from the MIMIC-IV database. The data of 2134 patients diagnosed with alcoholic cirrhosis (AC) were obtained from Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care IV database. Machine learning algorithms, including decision trees, random forests, extreme gradient boosting, Logistic Regression and support vector machines were employed to develop the prediction model. The model was trained on 70% of the data and validated on the remaining 30% randomly. Performance was assessed using the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve, calibration curves and decision curve analysis (DCA). SHAP analysis was used to assess the marginal effects of each independent variable. The mean age was 56.2 years, and 69.5% were male. The primary factors associated with 28-day mortality included Age, SOFA score, ASPIII score, OASIS score, LODS score, Temperature, Chloride, Lactate, Total bilirubin (Tbil), international normalized ratio (INR), Activated partial thromboplastin time (Aptt), Stroke, Malignancy, Congenital coagulation defect (Ccd). The machine learning model demonstrated good predictive performance in the training and validation group, higher than traditional MELD score. Our machine learning prediction model effectively identifies patients with alcoholic cirrhosis at high risk of 28-day mortality. This model could assist clinicians in early risk stratification and guide clinical decision-making. Further validation in external cohorts is warranted to confirm its generalizability.
Journal Article
Diagnostic and Prognostic Values of Noninvasive Predictors of Portal Hypertension in Patients with Alcoholic Cirrhosis
2015
Portal hypertension is a direct consequence of hepatic fibrosis, and several hepatic fibrosis markers have been evaluated as a noninvasive alternative to the detection of portal hypertension and esophageal varices. In the present study, we compared the diagnostic and prognostic values of the noninvasive fibrosis markers in patients with alcoholic cirrhosis. A total of 219 consecutive alcoholic cirrhosis patients were included. Biochemical scores and liver stiffness (LS) were compared with hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG). For the detection of clinically significant portal hypertension (CSPH; HVPG≥10 mmHg) in compensated patients, LS and LS-spleen diameter to platelet ratio score (LSPS) showed significantly better performance with area under the curves (AUCs) of 0.85 and 0.82, respectively, than aspartate aminotransferase-to-platelet ratio index, FIB-4, Forns' index, Lok index, (platelet count)2/[monocyte fraction (%) × segmented neutrophil fraction (%)], and platelet count-to-spleen diameter ratio (all P<0.001). However, for the detection of high-risk varices, none of the non-invasive tests showed reliable performance (AUCs of all investigated tests < 0.70). During a median follow-up period of 42.6 months, 46 patients with decompensated cirrhosis died. Lok index (hazard ratio [HR], 1.13; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.05-1.22; P = 0.001) and FIB-4 (HR, 1.06; 95% CI, 1.01-1.10; P = 0.009) were independently associated with all-cause death in decompensated patients. Among the tested noninvasive markers, only Lok index significantly improved discrimination function of MELD score in predicting overall survival. In conclusion, LS and LSPS most accurately predict CSPH in patients with compensated alcoholic cirrhosis. In the prediction of overall survival in decompensated patients, however, Lok index is an independent prognostic factor and improves the predictive performance of MELD score.
Journal Article
Evaluation of laboratory tests for cirrhosis and for alcohol use, in the context of alcoholic cirrhosis
2018
Laboratory tests can play an important role in assessment of alcoholic patients, including for evaluation of liver damage and as markers of alcohol intake. Evidence on test performance should lead to better selection of appropriate tests and improved interpretation of results. We compared laboratory test results from 1578 patients between cases (with alcoholic cirrhosis; 753 men, 243 women) and controls (with equivalent lifetime alcohol intake but no liver disease; 439 men, 143 women). Comparisons were also made between 631 cases who had reportedly been abstinent from alcohol for over 60 days and 364 who had not. ROC curve analysis was used to estimate and compare tests' ability to distinguish patients with and without cirrhosis, and abstinent and drinking cases. The best tests for presence of cirrhosis were INR and bilirubin, with areas under the ROC curve (AUCs) of 0.91 ± 0.01 and 0.88 ± 0.01, respectively. Confining analysis to patients with no current or previous ascites gave AUCs of 0.88 ± 0.01 for INR and 0.85 ± 0.01 for bilirubin. GGT and AST showed discrimination between abstinence and recent drinking in patients with cirrhosis, including those without ascites, when appropriate (and for GGT, sex-specific) limits were used. For AST, a cut-off limit of 85 units/L gave 90% specificity and 37% sensitivity. For GGT, cut-off limits of 288 units/L in men and 138 units/L in women gave 90% specificity for both and 40% sensitivity in men, 63% sensitivity in women. INR and bilirubin show the best separation between patients with alcoholic cirrhosis (with or without ascites) and control patients with similar lifetime alcohol exposure. Although AST and GGT are substantially increased by liver disease, they can give useful information on recent alcohol intake in patients with alcoholic cirrhosis when appropriate cut-off limits are used.
•Evidence on test performance promotes better selection of appropriate tests.•We assessed laboratory tests for liver dysfunction, and for abstinence.•The subject group consisted of 1578 alcoholic patients, comprising 996 cirrhotic patients (631 abstinent) and 582 controls.•INR and bilirubin were the best tests for detecting alcoholic cirrhosis.•High GGT and AST cut-off values distinguish cirrhotic drinkers from abstainers.
Journal Article
Alcohol-related cirrhosis: The most challenging etiology of cirrhosis is more burdensome than ever
2021
[...]nowadays, HCV-related cirrhosis is no longer the most frequent etiology in patients awaiting liver transplantation, and has been widely overcome by both ALC and NAFLD [8]. Besides an increased risk of mortality, liver cirrhosis also has a relevant economic impact on the healthcare system and affects the patients’ quality of life, being among the top 20 causes of disability-adjusted life years worldwide [2]. [...]patients with decompensated cirrhosis have a high risk of early hospital readmissions with relevant burdens for patients and caregivers [9]. The aim of their study was to assess the current trends of etiology, complications, and mortality for liver cirrhosis in patients requiring hospital admission. [...]they tried to evaluate possible differences in terms of clinical outcomes (morbidity, complications, and hospital readmissions) between patients with ALC and cirrhosis due to other etiologies. [...]the maintenance of alcohol abstinence is crucial for reducing the risk of decompensation and improving survival in patients with alcoholic cirrhosis [14,15].
Journal Article