Reuters Health Information: Covert cognitive deficit before liver shunt placement predicts hepatic encephalopathy
Covert cognitive deficit before liver shunt placement predicts hepatic encephalopathy
Last Updated: 2016-03-23
By Joan Stephenson
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - The presence of covert cognitive
impairment in patients before they receive a transjugular
intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) can help identify those
at risk for overt hepatic encephalopathy (HE) after shunt
placement, researchers from Italy report.
Psychometric evaluation before a TIPS "is able to identify
most of the patients who will develop HE after a TIPS and can be
useful to select patients in order to have the lowest incidence
of this important complication," the team writes in the American
Journal of Gastroenterology, online March 1.
This is particularly the case for patients who receive a
shunt because of refractory ascites, noted the researchers, from
the Sapienza University of Rome.
About 30% to 55% of cirrhotic patients develop HE after they
are treated with a TIPS, which is used in patients with
complications of portal hypertension. Up to one in 10 TIPS
patients may experience a severe, refractory form of HE that
requires reducing the shunt diameter.
Previous studies had shown that the presence of subclinical
cognitive impairment, or covert HE, is a strong predictor of
overt encephalopathy after the procedure. Because selection of
patients is currently the only way to try to reduce the
incidence of post-TIPS HE, the researchers sought to determine
whether detecting covert HE with a psychometric evaluation
before TIPS can help identify patients at risk for developing
the condition after shunt placement.
The study included 82 consecutive patients (mean age, 57.8;
70% male) who underwent the psychometric HE Score (PHES) battery
of tests designed to diagnose the subtle cognitive deficits that
characterize minimal HE in patients with cirrhosis. Patients
underwent TIPS placement (37 for variceal bleeding and 45 for
ascites) the following day.
The researchers estimated the cumulative incidence of the
first episode of HE during the first six months of follow-up,
taking into account the competing risks (death or liver
transplantation) in the data.
A total of 35 (43%) patients developed at least one episode
of overt HE within six months after TIPS, and HE persisted in
three individuals after standard treatment until it was resolved
by reducing the stent caliber, the researchers report.
About 77% of patients who developed HE after shunt placement
had a PHES score indicating the presence of covert HE before the
procedure. Compared with patients who did not have pre-TIPS
covert HE, those who did were significantly more likely to
develop overt encephalopathy within six months after TIPS
placement (p=0.0003).
Patients who developed post-TIPS HE were also significantly
older (62 vs. 55 years) and had significantly lower serum sodium
levels (135 vs. 138 mEq/l) than those who did not.
In a multivariate model, covert HE, age, and Child-Pugh
score (derived from parameters such as standard liver function
measures, extent of ascites, and degree of HE) were
independently associated with developing HE after shunt
placement.
If the presence of only covert HE is considered (and not age
or Child-Pugh score), the negative predictive value is 0.80 for
all 82 patients and 0.88 for the 45 patients who received a
shunt because of refractory ascites.
"This means that a patient with refractory ascites, without
covert HE according to PHES before a TIPS, has almost 90%
probability of being free of HE after a TIPS," the researchers
write.
The new study "shows that covert HE predicts a lower
threshold for developing overt HE after portacaval diversion by
TIPS," Dr. Arun Sanyal, of Virginia Commonwealth University's
School of Medicine, told Reuters Health by email. "No surprises
there."
The work's main value is showing that testing for covert HE
can identify those with a low risk of HE post-TIPS, said Dr.
Sanyal, who was not involved with the study.
"While this study also allows one to identify those at risk
of HE after TIPS, presumably for ascites, the good news is that
HE can be largely managed effectively after it develops and only
a minority of individuals need modification of the TIPS or even
occlusion," he said.
First author Dr. Silvia Nardelli did not respond to requests
for comment by press time.
The study had no commercial funding and the authors reported
no disclosures.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1U8Zi1K
Am J Gastroenterol 2016.
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