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Early treatment with terlipressin in patients with hepatorenal syndrome yields improved clinical outcomes in North American studies

Hepatorenal syndrome type 1 (HRS-1) is a serious complication of advanced cirrhosis and a potentially reversible form of acute kidney injury that is associated with rapidly deteriorating kidney function. Liver transplantation remains the only curative treatment for decompensated cirrhosis. However,...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Curry, Michael P., Vargas, Hugo E., Befeler, Alex S., Pyrsopoulos, Nikolaos T., Patwardhan, Vilas R., Jamil, Khurram
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9827960/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36633470
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.HC9.0000897228.91307.0c
Descripción
Sumario:Hepatorenal syndrome type 1 (HRS-1) is a serious complication of advanced cirrhosis and a potentially reversible form of acute kidney injury that is associated with rapidly deteriorating kidney function. Liver transplantation remains the only curative treatment for decompensated cirrhosis. However, terlipressin, a vasopressin analog, successfully reverses HRS-1, and may improve patient survival while awaiting liver transplantation. Patients with higher baseline serum creatinine have a reduced response to treatment with terlipressin. These post hoc analyses examined pooled data from 352 patients with HRS-1 treated with terlipressin in 3 North American-centric, Phase III, placebo-controlled clinical studies (i.e. OT-0401, REVERSE, and CONFIRM)—across 3 serum creatinine subgroups (i.e. <3, ≥3–<5, and ≥5 mg/dL)—to further delineate their correlation with HRS reversal, renal replacement therapy-free survival, and overall survival. Serum creatinine was significantly associated with HRS reversal in univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses (P<0.001). The incidence of HRS reversal inversely correlated with serum creatinine subgroup (<3 mg/dL, 49.2%; ≥3–<5 mg/dL, 28.0%; ≥5 mg/dL, 9.1%). At Day 30 follow-up, renal replacement therapy-free survival was significantly higher for patients with HRS-1 in the lower serum creatinine subgroups than in the higher subgroup (<5 vs. >5 mg/dL; p=0.01). Terlipressin-treated patients with HRS-1, with a lower baseline serum creatinine level, had a higher overall survival (p<0.001) and higher transplant-free survival at Day 90 (p=0.04). Patients with HRS-1 and lower serum creatinine levels who were treated with terlipressin had higher HRS reversal and survival outcomes, highlighting the significant need to identify and treat patients with HRS-1 early when they often have lower serum creatinine levels, and likely a greater response to terlipressin.