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To evaluate the role of ALBI score in predicting prognosis and hospital mortality of hospitalized cirrhotic patients with hepatic encephalopathy. To verify the best scoring system for predicting prognosis and survival among those patients. To investigate whether the presence of sarcopenia could add to the prognostic role of ALBI score.
Hepatic encephalopathy (HE) is a brain dysfunction caused by impaired liver functions and/or portosystemic shunting. It is one of the most serious complications of liver cirrhosis that leads to a signifcantly impaired quality of life and frequent hospitalizations. Although the pathogenesis of HE is complex ,accumulation of ammonia ,systemic inflammation, and oxidative stress play a pivotal role .Multiple organs are involved in whole body homeostasis of ammonia, with the liver being a key site .As cirrhosis leads to decline in capacity of liver to detoxify ammonia, skeletal muscle plays a compensatory in ammonia metabolism and clearance .Liver function largely reflect prognosis of liver disease,The ALBI score was originally developed as a measure of liver function in patients with HE.It was developed by putting all of the original components of the Child-Pugh (CTP) score into a multivariable model, the clinical features, (Ascites, Encephalopathy and INR) ,were shown to be redundant in that the entire prognostic value of the CTP score could be explained by just albumin and bilirubin levels in an appropriate formulation derived from multivariable model.As with the CTP and MELD scores, both of which were introduced for specific clinical situation and extended to more general application, the same has happened with ALBI.Increasingly, ALBI score is applied as a preferred measure of liver function due to its objectivity and sensitivity for minor liver function deterioration . In comparison to the MELD score, The ALBI score is sufficiently sensitive of liver function ,thus it might be expected to predict longer-term mortality in patients with cirrhosis, better than the MELD score, which would be expected to predict shorter-term mortality in patients with decompensated cirrhosis or liver failure. A study showed clearly that the ALBI score is the most accurate scoring system in predicting prognosis, followed by CTP, CLIF-SOFA, MELD-Na. Furthermore, it has been shown that the ALBI score is the strongest independent predictor of mortality among other scores. The presence of sarcopenia leads to higher risk of HE. Muscle depletion defined by mid arm circumference is associated with development of covert and overt HE
Age
20 - 90 years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Start Date
November 1, 2024
Primary Completion Date
October 1, 2025
Completion Date
November 1, 2025
Last Updated
November 8, 2024
106
ESTIMATED participants
Lead Sponsor
Assiut University
NCT06169592
NCT07275554
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