Gastro Hep Advances (Jan 2023)

Differential Effects of COVID-19 Hospitalization on the Trajectory of Liver Disease Progression

  • Dilara Hatipoğlu,
  • Connor Mulligan,
  • Jeffrey Wang,
  • Juan Peticco,
  • Reid Grinspoon,
  • Sanjay Gadi,
  • Camilla Mills,
  • Jay Luther,
  • Raymond T. Chung

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 4
pp. 480 – 486

Abstract

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Background and Aims: Patients with chronic liver disease (CLD) were significantly affected by COVID-19. Despite evidence of acute hepatic injury and increased mortality, the long-term effects of COVID-19 hospitalization on the natural history of CLD patients are unknown. Methods: The Massachusetts General Hospital COVID-19 registry was used to obtain a cohort of CLD patients hospitalized between March 8 and June 3, 2020. The Partners Research Patient Data Registry was used to develop a matched CLD patient control list without COVID-19. Fibrosis-4 index (FIB-4), nonalcoholic fatty liver disease fibrosis score (NFS), and model for end-stage liver disease/Na (MELD-Na) scores were calculated pre-, day of, and 1-year post-discharge from admission. Unpaired t-test was used to compare continuous variables. Results: Fifty-two COVID-19 patients and 92 control patients with CLD were included. Patients with non-cirrhotic CLD who were hospitalized for COVID-19 had an acute rise in FIB-4 on admission with subsequent improvement on one-year follow-up demonstrating no difference in progression of liver disease compared to the controls (P = .87, confidence interval [CI] −0.088 to 0.048). Similar trends were observed in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease patients using NFS (P = .48, CI −0.016 to 0.023). In contrast, patients with cirrhosis experienced rise in MELD-Na postadmission compared to the control cirrhosis group (0.35 vs −0.076/month; P = .04, CI −0.827 to −0.025), suggesting a potential for long-term consequences of COVID-19. Conclusion: Non-cirrhotic CLD patients who survive COVID-19 hospitalization do not appear to have change in FIB-4, NFS scores at one year. However, patients with cirrhosis exhibit increasing MELD-Na one-year post-COVID suggesting a differential effect of acute COVID-19 on the trajectory of established cirrhosis.

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