Litcius/Paper detail

Implications of anaemia and response to anaemia treatment on outcomes in patients with cirrhosis

Jassin Rashidi‐Alavijeh, Nargiz Nuruzade, Alexandra Frey, Eva‐Maria Huessler, Anne Hörster, Amos Zeller, Andreas Schütte, Hartmut Schmidt, Katharina Willuweit, Christian M. Lange

2023JHEP Reports12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background & Aims: Anaemia is frequently observed in patients with cirrhosis and was identified as a predictor of adverse outcomes, such as increased mortality and occurrence of acute-on-chronic liver failure. To date, the possible effects of iron supplementation on these adverse outcomes are not well described. We therefore aimed to assess the role of iron supplementation in patients with cirrhosis and its capability to improve prognosis. Methods: Laboratory diagnostics were performed in consecutive outpatients with cirrhosis admitted between July 2018 and December 2019 to the University Hospital Essen. Associations with transplant-free survival were assessed in regression models. Results: = 0.003) were significant predictors in multivariate analysis. Conclusions: An increase of haemoglobin levels is associated with improvement of transplant-free survival in patients with cirrhosis. Because the prediction of haemoglobin increase significantly depends on rifaximin and iron supplementation, application of these two medications can have an important impact on the outcome of these patients. Impact and implications: Anaemia is very common in patients with cirrhosis and is known to be a predictor of negative outcomes, but little is known about the effect of iron substitution in these individuals. In our cohort, increase of haemoglobin levels improved transplant-free survival of patients with cirrhosis. The increase of haemoglobin levels was mainly induced by iron supplementation and was even stronger in the case of concomitant use of iron and rifaximin. Clinical trial registration: UME-ID-10042.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCirrhosisInternal medicineGastroenterologyHazard ratioRifaximinProportional hazards modelAdverse effectLiver diseaseMultivariate analysisAscitesModel for End-Stage Liver DiseaseLiver transplantationTransplantationConfidence intervalAntibioticsMicrobiologyBiologyLiver Disease and TransplantationIron Metabolism and DisordersErythropoietin and Anemia Treatment