Modern orvostudományi diagnosztikus eljárások és terápiák fejlesztése transzlációs
megközelítésbe...(EFOP-3.6.2-16-2017-00006) Támogató: EFOP
(GINOP-2.3.2-15-2016-00015) Támogató: GINOP
Széchenyi 2020
(Janos Bolyai Research Fellowship) Támogató: MTA Bolyai pályázat
(UNKP-20-5)
Hungarian Scientific Research Fund(K116634)
(FK131864)
(FK138929)
Szakterületek:
Gasztroenterológia és hepatológia
Klinikai orvostan
Orvos- és egészségtudomány
The incidence and medical costs of acute pancreatitis (AP) are on the rise, and severe
cases still have a 30% mortality rate. We aimed to evaluate hypoalbuminemia as a risk
factor and the prognostic value of human serum albumin in AP. Data from 2461 patients
were extracted from the international, prospective, multicentre AP registry operated
by the Hungarian Pancreatic Study Group. Data from patients with albumin measurement
in the first 48 h (n = 1149) and anytime during hospitalization (n = 1272) were analysed.
Multivariate binary logistic regression and Receiver Operator Characteristic curve
analysis were used. The prevalence of hypoalbuminemia (< 35 g/L) was 19% on admission
and 35.7% during hospitalization. Hypoalbuminemia dose-dependently increased the risk
of severity, mortality, local complications and organ failure and is associated with
longer hospital stay. The predictive value of hypoalbuminemia on admission was poor
for severity and mortality. Severe hypoalbuminemia (< 25 g/L) represented an independent
risk factor for severity (OR 48.761; CI 25.276-98.908) and mortality (OR 16.83; CI
8.32-35.13). Albumin loss during AP was strongly associated with severity (p < 0.001)
and mortality (p = 0.002). Hypoalbuminemia represents an independent risk factor for
severity and mortality in AP, and it shows a dose-dependent relationship with local
complications, organ failure and length of stay.