The natural history of compensated HCV-related cirrhosis: A prospective long-term study
Background & Aims The natural history of HCV-related compensated cirrhosis has been poorly investigated in Latin-American countries. Our study evaluated mortality and clinical outcomes in compensated cirrhotic patients followed for 6 years. Methods Four hundred and two patients with compensated...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of hepatology 2013-03, Vol.58 (3), p.434-444 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background & Aims The natural history of HCV-related compensated cirrhosis has been poorly investigated in Latin-American countries. Our study evaluated mortality and clinical outcomes in compensated cirrhotic patients followed for 6 years. Methods Four hundred and two patients with compensated HCV-related cirrhosis were prospectively recruited in a tertiary care academic center. At the time of admission, patients were stratified as compensated (absence [stage 1] or presence [stage 2] of esophageal varices) as defined by D’Amico et al . Subjects were followed to identify overall mortality or liver transplantation and clinical complication rates. Results Among 402 subjects, 294 were categorized as stage 1 and 108 as stage 2. Over a median of 176 weeks, 42 deaths occurred (10%), of which 30 were considered liver-related (7%) and 12 non-liver-related (3%); eight individuals (2%) underwent liver transplantation; 30 patients (7%) developed HCC, 67 individuals in stage 1 (22%) developed varices and any event of clinical decompensation occurred in 80 patients (20%). The 6-year cumulative overall mortality or liver transplantation was 15% and 45%, for stages 1 and 2, respectively ( p |
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ISSN: | 0168-8278 1600-0641 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jhep.2012.10.023 |