Acute liver failure in children: the first 348 patients in the pediatric acute liver failure study group

Robert H Squires Jr, Benjamin L Shneider, John Bucuvalas, Estella Alonso, Ronald J Sokol, Michael R Narkewicz, Anil Dhawan, Philip Rosenthal, Norberto Rodriguez-Baez, Karen F Murray, Simon Horslen, Martin G Martin, M James Lopez, Humberto Soriano, Brendan M McGuire, Maureen M Jonas, Nada Yazigi, Ross W Shepherd, Kathleen Schwarz, Steven Lobritto, Daniel W Thomas, Joel E Lavine, Saul Karpen, Vicky Ng, Deirdre Kelly, Nancy Simonds, Linda S Hynan, Robert H Squires Jr, Benjamin L Shneider, John Bucuvalas, Estella Alonso, Ronald J Sokol, Michael R Narkewicz, Anil Dhawan, Philip Rosenthal, Norberto Rodriguez-Baez, Karen F Murray, Simon Horslen, Martin G Martin, M James Lopez, Humberto Soriano, Brendan M McGuire, Maureen M Jonas, Nada Yazigi, Ross W Shepherd, Kathleen Schwarz, Steven Lobritto, Daniel W Thomas, Joel E Lavine, Saul Karpen, Vicky Ng, Deirdre Kelly, Nancy Simonds, Linda S Hynan

Abstract

Objectives: To determine short-term outcome for children with acute liver failure (ALF) as it relates to cause, clinical status, and patient demographics and to determine prognostic factors.

Study design: A prospective, multicenter case study collecting demographic, clinical, laboratory, and short-term outcome data on children from birth to 18 years with ALF. Patients without encephalopathy were included if the prothrombin time and international normalized ratio remained > or = 20 seconds and/or >2, respectively, despite vitamin K. Primary outcome measures 3 weeks after study entry were death, death after transplantation, alive with native liver, and alive with transplanted organ.

Results: The cause of ALF in 348 children included acute acetaminophen toxicity (14%), metabolic disease (10%), autoimmune liver disease (6%), non-acetaminophen drug-related hepatotoxicity (5%), infections (6%), other diagnosed conditions (10%); 49% were indeterminate. Outcome varied between patient sub-groups; 20% with non-acetaminophen ALF died or underwent liver transplantation and never had clinical encephalopathy.

Conclusions: Causes of ALF in children differ from in adults. Clinical encephalopathy may not be present in children. The high percentage of indeterminate cases provides an opportunity for investigation.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Age of the patient at entry into the PALF study.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Calendar month when patients were entered into the PALF study. Patients were divided into three diagnostic cagtegories: acetaminophen toxicity, indeterminate, and all others with an established diagnosis.

Source: PubMed

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