Hepatic venous pressure gradient predicts risk of hepatic decompensation and liver-related mortality in patients with MASLD
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Paternostro, Rafael; Kwanten, Wilhelmus Josephus; Hofer, Benedikt Silvester; Semmler, Georg; Bagdadi, Ali; Luzko, Irina; Hernández Gea, Virginia; Graupera, Isabel; García Pagán, Juan Carlos C.; Saltini, Dario; Indulti, Federica; Schepis, Filippo; Moga, Lucile; Rautou, Pierre Emmanuel; Llop, Elba; Tellez, Luís; Albillos, Agustín; Fortea Ormaechea, José Ignacio; Puente Sánchez, Ángela; [et al.]Fecha
2024Derechos
Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of European Association for the Study of the Liver. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Publicado en
Journal of Hepatology, 2024, 81(5), 827-836
Editorial
Elsevier
Disponible después de
2025-12-01
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Palabras clave
Portal hypertension
MASLD
Hepatic venous pressure gradient
Hepatic decompensation
Advanced chronic liver disease
Resumen/Abstract
Background & Aims: Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) is a leading cause of advanced chronic liver disease (ACLD). Portal hypertension drives hepatic decompensation and is best diagnosed by hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG) measurement. Here, we investigate the prognostic value of HVPG in MASLD-related compensated ACLD (MASLD-cACLD). Methods: This European multicentre study included patients with MASLD-cACLD characterised by HVPG at baseline. Hepatic decompensation (variceal bleeding/ascites/hepatic encephalopathy) and liver-related mortality were considered the primary events of interest. Results: 340 MASLD-cACLD patients [56.2% men; age: 62 (55-68) years; MELD: 8 (7-9); 71.2% diabetes] were included. Clinically significant portal hypertension (CSPH; i.e., HVPG ≥10 mmHg) was found in 209 patients (61.5%). During a median follow-up of 41.5 (27.5-65.8) months, 65 patients developed hepatic decompensation with a cumulative incidence of 10.0% after 2 years (2Y) and 30.7% after 5 years (5Y) in MASLD-cACLD with CSPH, compared to 2.4% after 2Y and 9.4% after 5Y in patients without CSPH. Variceal bleeding did not occur without CSPH. CSPH (subdistribution hazard ratio, SHR:5.13; p<0.001) Conclusion: HVPG measurement is of high prognostic value in MASLD-cACLD. While MASLD-cACLD patients without CSPH show a very low short-term risk of decompensation and liver-related mortality is rare, the presence of CSPH substantially increases both risks.
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