Abstract

Standardized sex-specific cut-offs for sarcopenia in cirrhosis are needed to identify the risk of clinical complications and to discriminate the severity of sarcopenia. We aimed to compare clinical characteristics between patients with cirrhosis categorized according to the severity of sarcopenia. Computed tomography images were taken at the 3rd lumbar vertebra from 603 patients with cirrhosis and 129 adult donors for living liver transplantation. Patients with skeletal muscle index (SMI) two standard deviations (SD) below the sex-specific mean value of young donors (18–40 years old) were categorized as having severe sarcopenia whereas patients with SMI between −1 and −2 SD of the sex-specific young adult mean values were categorized as having sarcopenia. In the cirrhosis group, 408 patients (68%) were male with the mean age of 57 ± 0.4 years, and MELD score of 14 ± 0.4. Patients were divided into three groups: severe-sarcopenic (SMI < 30 cm2/m2 in females and <42 cm2/m2 in males), sarcopenic (30 ≤ SMI < 37 cm2/m2 in females and 42 ≤ SMI < 50 cm2/m2 in males) and non-sarcopenic (SMI ≥ 37 cm2/m2 in females and ≥50 cm2/m2 in males). Patients with cirrhosis and severe sarcopenia had lower muscle radiodensity and higher plasma neutrophil as well as neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio levels than both non- and sarcopenic groups. The frequency of alcohol-induced cirrhosis, refractory ascites, hepatic encephalopathy, CRP > 20 mg/mL, and severe malnutrition was also higher in severe-sarcopenic patients. The interval between sarcopenia and severe sarcopenia may reflect a window of opportunity in which to intervene and mitigate muscle wasting to improve patient outcomes.

Highlights

  • High-resolution image-based techniques such as computed tomography (CT) have expanded our understanding of the prognostic significance of body composition in patients with cirrhosis over the last decade

  • Decompensation with ascites and hepatic encephalopathy was present in 28% and 32% of patients, respectively

  • We show the frequency of complications, inflammation, poor nutritional status, and frequency of complications, inflammation, poor nutritional status, and abnormal body composition features to be significantly higher in patients with severe sarcopenia when compared to those in the sarcopenic and non-sarcopenic groups

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Summary

Introduction

High-resolution image-based techniques such as computed tomography (CT) have expanded our understanding of the prognostic significance of body composition in patients with cirrhosis over the last decade. Secondary analysis of CT images is objective, precise, and is considered to be a gold standard to diagnose skeletal muscle abnormalities in clinical research. The prevalence of this radiologically-identified abnormality in skeletal muscle varies widely between 30–70%, in patients with cirrhosis [3]. This variability could result from divergent modalities applied to quantify muscle mass, criteria, cut-points used to define sarcopenia, and based on the population of interest. Standardized diagnostic criteria for sarcopenia in clinical research and practice are required to improve our ability to study this critical condition

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