Abstract

Introduction: Liver cirrhosis is caused by the development of various acute and chronic liver diseases. Esophageal varices is a common and serious complication of liver cirrhosis during decompensation. Despite the development of various treatments, the prognosis for liver cirrhosis with esophageal varices (LCEV) remains poor. We aimed to establish and validate a nomogram for predicting in-hospital death in LCEV patients.Methods: Data on LCEV patients were extracted from the Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care III and IV (MIMIC-III and MIMIC-IV) database. The patients from MIMIC-III were randomly divided into training and validation cohorts. Training cohort was used for establishing the model, validation and MIMIC-IV cohorts were used for validation. The independent prognostic factors for LCEV patients were determined using the least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (LASSO) method and forward stepwise logistic regression. We then constructed a nomogram to predict the in-hospital death of LCEV patients. Multiple indicators were used to validate the nomogram, including the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC), calibration curve, Hosmer-Lemeshow test, integrated discrimination improvement (IDI), net reclassification index (NRI), and decision curve analysis (DCA).Results: Nine independent prognostic factors were identified by using LASSO and stepwise regressions: age, Elixhauser score, anion gap, sodium, albumin, bilirubin, international normalized ratio, vasopressor use, and bleeding. The nomogram was then constructed and validated. The AUC value of the nomogram was 0.867 (95% CI = 0.832–0.904) in the training cohort, 0.846 (95% CI = 0.790–0.896) in the validation cohort and 0.840 (95% CI = 0.807–0.872) in the MIMIC-IV cohort. High AUC values indicated the good discriminative ability of the nomogram, while the calibration curves and the Hosmer-Lemeshow test results demonstrated that the nomogram was well-calibrated. Improvements in NRI and IDI values suggested that our nomogram was superior to MELD-Na, CAGIB, and OASIS scoring system. DCA curves indicated that the nomogram had good value in clinical applications.Conclusion: We have established the first prognostic nomogram for predicting the in-hospital death of LCEV patients. The nomogram is easy to use, performs well, and can be used to guide clinical practice, but further external prospective validation is still required.

Highlights

  • Liver cirrhosis is caused by the development of various acute and chronic liver diseases

  • After applying the inclusion and exclusion criteria, 813 liver cirrhosis with esophageal varices (LCEV) patients were identified from MIMIC-III database (569 and 244 in the training and validation cohorts, respectively) and 930 LCEV patients were identified from MIMIC-IV database

  • Compared with the MELD-Na, CAGIB and OASIS systems, the net reclassification index (NRI) values were 0.930, 1.192, and 0.857, respectively, in the training cohort, and 1.000, 1.190, and 0.630 in the validation cohort, and 0.689, 0.986, and 0.650 in the MIMIC-IV cohort

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Summary

Introduction

Liver cirrhosis is caused by the development of various acute and chronic liver diseases. Despite the development of various treatments, the prognosis for liver cirrhosis with esophageal varices (LCEV) remains poor. Liver cirrhosis is a chronic liver disease characterized by pseudolobule formation, hepatocyte necrosis, regenerated nodules, and diffused fibrosis. It is caused by advanced liver disease with a complex clinical pathogenesis. 30–70% of liver cirrhosis patients develop esophageal varices, and 5–15% will experience rupture bleeding, with mortality occurring in up to 30% of cases of the first hemorrhage [2, 3]. Patients having liver cirrhosis with esophageal varices (LCEV) are prone to acute chronic liver failure, hepatorenal syndrome, ascites (AC), hepatic encephalopathy (HE), and other complications [4, 5]

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