Predictors of long-term clinical outcomes after TIPS: An ALTA group study.

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Tác giả: Justin R Boike, Archita P Desai, Michael Fallon, Catherine Frenette, Aparna Goel, Dyanna Gregory, Rachel Hoffman, Kelly Hu, K Pallav Kolli, Jennifer C Lai, Nikhilesh R Mazumder, Giuseppi Morelli, Yael R Nobel, Cynthia Padilla, Sonali Paul, Adnan Said, Erin K Spengler, Bartley Thornburg, Lisa B VanWagner, Elizabeth C Verna, Yuan Zhang

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại:

Thông tin xuất bản: United States : Hepatology (Baltimore, Md.) , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 715174

 BACKGROUND AND AIMS: While TIPS is traditionally considered a bridge to liver transplant (LT), some patients achieve long-term transplant-free survival (TFS) with TIPS alone. Prognosis and need for LT should not only be assessed at time of procedure, but also re-evaluated in patients with favorable early outcomes. APPROACH AND RESULTS: Adult recipients of TIPS in the multicenter advancing liver therapeutic approaches retrospective cohort study were included (N=1127 patients
  2040 person-years follow-up). Adjusted competing risk regressions were used to assess factors associated with long-term post-TIPS clinical outcomes at the time of procedure and 6 months post-TIPS. MELD-Na at TIPS was significantly associated with post-TIPS mortality (subdistribution hazards ratio of death 1.1 [ p =0.42], 1.3 [ p =0.04], and 1.7 [ p <
 0.01] for MELD-Na 15-19, 20-24, and ≥25 relative to MELD-Na <
 15, respectively). MELD 3.0 was also associated with post-TIPS outcomes. Among the 694 (62%) patients who achieved early (6 mo) post-TIPS TFS, rates of long-term TFS were 88% at 1 year and 57% at 3 years post-TIPS. Additionally, a within-individual increase in MELD-Na score of >
 3 points from TIPS to 6 months post-TIPS was significantly associated with long-term mortality, regardless of initial MELD-Na score (subdistribution hazards ratio of death 1.8, p <
 0.01). For patients with long-term post-TIPS TFS, rates of complications of the TIPS or portal hypertension were low. CONCLUSIONS: Among patients with early post-TIPS TFS, prognosis and need for LT should be reassessed, informed by postprocedure changes in MELD-Na and clinical status. For selected patients, "destination TIPS" without LT may offer long-term survival with freedom from portal hypertensive complications.
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