Abstract

Cardiac dysfunction is a key factor in the pathogenesis of hepatorenal syndrome, for which terlipressin is the recommended first-line treatment. This study investigates whether long-term terlipressin can ameliorate the subclinical cardiac dysfunction observed in decompensated cirrhosis. Twenty-two patients with decompensated cirrhosis and ascites enrolled in a prospective study of home continuous terlipressin infusion were included. Cardiac function was assessed using dobutamine stress echocardiogram before and after 12 weeks of terlipressin. The primary outcome was the impact of terlipressin on cardiac reserve; the change in cardiac output (CO) in response to stress. Median age was 61 years (IQR 56-64), median MELD score was 15 (IQR 12.3-17.0) and 72.7% were male. The increase in CO in response to low-dose dobutamine was significantly higher following terlipressin (↑4.0L/min [↑57.8%]) as compared to baseline (↑1.8L/min [21.3%], p=0.0001). The proportion of patients with impaired cardiac reserve (defined by ΔCO <25% after low-dose dobutamine) reduced from 81.8% at baseline to 40.9% after terlipressin, (p=0.02), driven primarily by improvement in inotropic function. Resting cardiac output (CO) decreased significantly after terlipressin from 8.9±2.2L/min to 7.2±1.8 L/min (p<0.001, normal range 5-6L/min), due to a decrease in stroke volume from 108 to 86mL/beat (p=0.006). Long-term continuous terlipressin infusion resulted in a significant increase in cardiac reserve and attenuation of the hyperdynamic state usually observed in decompensated cirrhosis. These data provide important mechanistic insight into the pathogenesis and reversibility of cardiac dysfunction in cirrhosis. Future studies are required to evaluate whether long-term terlipressin can prevent hepatic decompensating events such as hepatorenal syndrome in high-risk individuals. ANZCTR NUMBER: (http://www.anzctr.org.au/): ACTRN12619000891123.

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