Reuters Health Information: MELD score tied to survival in trauma patients with liver disease
MELD score tied to survival in trauma patients with liver disease
Last Updated: 2015-10-05
By David Douglas
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Improvement in Model for
End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) score in critically ill trauma
patients with chronic liver disease is associated with lower
mortality, according to Boston-based researchers.
As Dr. Kenneth B. Christopher told Reuters Health by email,
"Our observational study shows that in trauma patients with
cirrhosis, those with decreases in MELD score within the first 3
days of ICU admission have higher survival."
He added, "As MELD score has three components (serum
bilirubin, serum creatinine and INR), improved survival with
decreased MELD score may reflect improvements in kidney function
which is known to correlate with outcomes."
For their study, online September 30 in JAMA Surgery, Dr.
Christopher of Brigham and Women's Hospital and colleagues
examined data on 525 patients treated between 1998 and 2002.
The mean MELD score at ICU admission was 19.3 and the 30-day
mortality was 21.9%. After adjustment, the odds of 30-day
mortality for each 1-point rise in this score were significantly
increased (odds ratio, 1.03). Conversely, for a drop in MELD
score of more than 2, for example, the odds of 30-day mortality
fell by 77%.
"The change in MELD score," the researchers say, "improves
model performance and discrimination when added to a model that
includes MELD score at ICU admission."
However, they add, "because our study is observational and
not interventional, a causal relationship between change in MELD
score and outcomes after trauma cannot be inferred from these
data alone."
Commenting on the findings by email, Dr. Timothy A. Pritts,
author of an accompanying editorial, told Reuters Health, "Key
findings from the study include that in trauma patients with
cirrhosis of the liver, decreased in MELD score during the first
few days of admission are associated with improved survival in
these critically ill patients."
"This suggests that trauma surgeons and intensivists should
evaluate the dynamics of the MELD score, rather than viewing it
as an isolated data point," Dr. Pritts, of the University of
Cincinnati Medical Center, Ohio, concluded.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1MU2uYw and http://bit.ly/1jJZDYz
JAMA Surg 2015.
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