Liver diseases are associated with profound hemostatic changes proportional to severity of illness.
Hemostatic changes in acute‐on‐chronic liver failure (ACLF) may in part reflect critical illness.
Hemostatic changes in ACLF partly overlap with those in sepsis, with rebalanced hemostasis in both.
Patients with sepsis had hyperfibrinogenemia, associated with a thrombogenic clot structure.
Abstract
BackgroundEven the sickest patients with chronic liver disease (CLD), such as those with acute‐on‐chronic liver failure (ACLF) remain in hemostatic balance due to a concomitant decline in pro‐ and antihemostatic factors.
ObjectivesWe aimed to study whether the hemostatic status in ACLF is merely an exaggeration from the status in patients with compensated and acutely decompensated cirrhosis, or whether sepsis‐associated hemostatic changes contribute.
MethodsWe performed extensive hemostatic profiling in 31 adult patients with ACLF, 20 patients with sepsis without underlying CLD, and 40 healthy controls.
ResultsWe found similarly elevated plasma levels of the platelet adhesive protein von Willebrand factor (VWF) and decreased levels of the VWF‐regulating protease ADAMTS13 in both groups compared to healthy controls. In vivo markers of activation of coagulation (thrombin‐antithrombin III, D‐dimer) were similarly elevated in both groups compared to controls, but ex vivo thrombin‐generating capacity was similar between patients and controls, despite a much more profound international normalized ratio elevation in ACLF. Plasma fibrinogen levels were much higher in septics, which was accompanied by a decreased ex vivo clot permeability and an increase in ex vivo resistance to clot lysis. All hemostatic parameters were remarkably stable over the first 10 days after admission.
ConclusionsWe have found hemostatic changes in ACLF to partially overlap with that of patients with sepsis, and evidence of preserved hemostatic capacity in both patient groups. The notable difference was a profound hyperfibrinogenemia, associated with a thrombogenic clot structure and a marked ex vivo resistance to fibrinolysis in patients with sepsis.
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