New evidence-Based guidelines for acute and acute-on-chronic liver failure are presented at the SCCM 49th Critical Care Congress.
New evidence-based recommendations are presented in the Critical Care Medicine, the official journal of the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) for the management of patients with liver failure. The new guidelines assemble recommendations for critical care specialists managing the wide range of conditions and complications posed by liver failure – a serious organ derangement that carries a high risk of death, and for which liver transplantation may be the only definitive treatment.
‘New SCCM guidelines on hepatic failure are evidence-based, prepared upon the recommendations of critical care specialists, international expert Committees with a rigorous approach of reviewing.’
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Rahul Nanchal, MD, MS, FCCM, of Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, and Ram Subramanian, MD, FCCM, of Emory University Hospital were Co-Chairs of the Guidelines Committee.Read More..
Recommendations on Liver Failure in Five Key Areas
As for all SCCM guidelines, the multidisciplinary, international expert Committee followed a rigorous approach to reviewing the best available evidence and developing consensus guidelines to answer a defined set of clinical questions.
Two forms of hepatic failure are addressed. Acute liver failure (ALF) is a life-threatening condition associated with rapid loss of liver function – over a period of days or weeks – in a previously healthy person. Acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) develops in a patient with pre-existing chronic liver disease.
Critically ill patients with liver disease are at risk of unique manifestations affecting various organ systems. “Strategies used to manage organ complications in general critical illness are not always applicable to the care of the patient with liver failure,” according to the guideline statement. Through a formal review and guideline development process, the Committee approved 29 evidence-based recommendations in five areas:
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Although the guidelines reflect the latest research on each topic, most of the recommendations are based on “low-quality indirect evidence” – for a few clinical questions, no evidence-based recommendation could be made.
The Committee highlights areas in need of further research to better inform clinical practice. While acknowledging the limitations of the recommendations regarding the complex challenges in critically ill patients with ALF/ACLF, the Guideline authors conclude: “Our approach led to the generation of a contemporary document that can be used as a reference for clinicians.”
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