Abstract

A novel index, the serum aspartate aminotransferase activity/platelet count ratio index (APRI), has been identified as a biochemical surrogate for histological fibrogenesis and fibrosis in cirrhosis. We evaluated the ability of preoperative APRI to predict hepatic failure following liver resection for hepatocellular carcinoma. Potential preoperative risk factors for postoperative hepatic failure (hepatic coma with hyperbilirubinemia, four patients; intractable pleural effusion or ascites, 30 patients; and variceal bleeding, one patient) as well as APRI were evaluated in 366 patients undergoing liver resection for hepatocellular carcinoma. Prognostic significance was determined by univariate and multivariate analyses. Hepatic failure developed postoperatively in 30 patients, causing death in four. APRI correlated with histological intensity of hepatitis activity and degree of hepatic fibrosis, and was significantly higher in patients who developed postoperative hepatic failure than in others without failure. Risk of postoperative hepatic failure increased as the serum albumin concentration and platelet count decreased and as indocyanine green retention rate at 15 min, aspartate and alanine aminotransferase activities, and APRI increased. Only APRI was an independent preoperative factor on multivariate analysis. Of the four patients who died of postoperative hepatic failure, three had an APRI of at least 10. Preoperative APRI independently predicted hepatic failure following liver resection for hepatocellular carcinoma. Patients with an APRI of 10 or more have a high risk of postoperative hepatic failure.

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