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Survival benefits of terlipressin and non-responder state in hepatorenal syndrome: a meta-analysis. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Terlipressin is known to improve kidney function in patients with hepatorenal syndrome (HRS), but its long-term survival benefits are still uncertain.
  • In a study of 377 patients, terlipressin was found to reduce all-cause mortality by 15% and specifically HRS-related mortality by 9% within three months.
  • The findings suggest that while terlipressin offers some long-term survival benefits for HRS, further research on adding antioxidants like N-Acetylcysteine (NAC) for non-responders is necessary to enhance outcomes.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Terlipressin improves renal function in hepatorenal syndrome (HRS) is a known fact. However the reason for lack of its long-term survival benefits despite improvement in renal function remains unclear. The aim of this study was to analyze the survival benefits of terlipressin in HRS and to address the issue of non-responder state to terlipressin.

Materials And Methods: Electronic databases and relevant articles were searched for all types of studies related to HRS and use of terlipressin in HRS. Reduction in all-cause mortality rate was the primary outcome measure. Reduction in mortality rate due to HRS and other causes of death were also analyzed.

Results: With total 377 patients analyzed from eight eligible studies; terlipressin reduced all-cause mortality rate by 15% (Risk Difference: -0.15%, 95% CI:-0.26 to -0.03). Reduction in the mortality rate due to HRS at three months was 9% (Risk Difference:-0.09%, 95% CI:-0.18 to 0.00).

Conclusion: Terlipressin has long term survival benefits perhaps at least up to three months but only with HRS as a cause of death not for other causes of death. Benefits and role of antioxidants like N- Acetylcysteine (NAC) in non-responder patients' needs to be studied further. Long-term use of low dose terlipressin (<4 mg/d) plus albumin and addition of antioxidant NAC to this regimen may help in improving both HRS reversal rate and survival rate in non-responders to terlipressin.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3608296PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0253-7613.106436DOI Listing

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