Impact of creatinine values on MELD scores in male and female candidates for liver transplantation.

Ann Hepatol

Post Graduate Program in Medicine-Hepatology, Universidade Federal de Ciências da Saúde de Porto Alegre, Porto Alegre, Brazil.

Published: October 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • A systematic bias in the allocation of liver transplants has been identified, affecting women due to standard creatinine measurements, which underestimate their renal function compared to men.
  • Researchers studied 639 female and male candidates for liver transplantation and applied the MDRD formula to adjust creatinine levels for gender.
  • The study found that while correcting creatinine levels increased MELD scores for women slightly, both genders had similar survival rates and chances of receiving a transplant within 3 and 6 months, indicating that the correction did not enhance the predictive accuracy of the MELD score.

Article Abstract

Introduction: A systematic bias against women, resulting from the use of creatinine as a measure of renal function, has been identified in Model for End-stage Liver Disease (MELD)-based liver allocation. Correction of this bias by calculation of female creatinine levels using the Modification of Diet in Renal Disease (MDRD) formula has been suggested.

Material And Methods: A cohort of 639 cirrhotic candidates for first-time liver transplantation was studied. Creatinine levels were corrected for gender using the MDRD formula. The accuracy of MELD, with or without creatinine correction, to predict 3-and 6-month mortality after inclusion in a transplant waiting list was estimated.

Results: Women exhibited significantly lower creatinine levels, glomerular filtration rate, and MELD scores than men. After creatinine correction, female MELD scores had a mean increase of 1.1 points. Creatinine correction yielded an increase of 3 points in the MELD score in 15.2% of patients, 2 points in 22.4%, and 1 point in 17.6% of patients. The likelihood of death at 3 and 6 months after enrollment in the transplant waiting list was similar in males and females and the likelihood of receiving a transplant, as assessed by Kaplan-Meier survival curves, was also similar in males and females.

Conclusion: The survival or the likelihood of receiving a transplant while on the waiting list were similar in men and women in both pre- and post-MELD eras and creatinine correction did not increase the accuracy of the MELD score in estimating 3- and 6-month mortality in female candidates for liver transplantation.

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