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Serum and ascitic fluid bacterial DNA: A new independent prognostic factor in noninfected patients with cirrhosis

✍ Scribed by Pedro Zapater; Rubén Francés; José M. González-Navajas; Maria A. de la Hoz; Rocío Moreu; Sonia Pascual; David Monfort; Silvia Montoliu; Carmen Vila; Amparo Escudero; Xavier Torras; Isabel Cirera; Lucía Llanos; Carlos Guarner-Argente; José M. Palazón; Fernando Carnicer; Pablo Bellot; Carlos Guarner; Ramón Planas; Ricard Solá; Miguel A. Serra; Carlos Muñoz; Miguel Pérez-Mateo; José Such


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
165 KB
Volume
48
Category
Article
ISSN
0270-9139

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✦ Synopsis


We tested the hypothesis that the presence of bacterial DNA (bactDNA) in ascitic fluid and serum is associated with decreased survival in patients with cirrhosis. In a prospective, multicenter study, we analyzed the clinical evolution of 156 patients with cirrhosis and ascites (first or recurrence) with lower than 250 polymorphonuclear cells (PMN)/L, negative ascites bacteriological culture, and absence of other bacterial infections being admitted for evaluation of largevolume paracentesis, according to the presence of bactDNA at admission. Survival, causes of death, and successive hospital admissions were determined during a 12-month follow-up period. BactDNA was detected in 48 patients. The most prevalent identified bactDNA corresponded to Escherichia coli (n ‫؍‬ 32/48 patients, 66.6%). Patients were followed for 12 months after inclusion and in this period 34 patients died: 16 of 108 (15%) bactDNA negative versus 18 of 48 (38%) bactDNA positive (P ‫؍‬ 0.003). The most frequent cause of death was acute-on-chronic liver failure in both groups (7/16 and 9/18 in patients without or with bactDNA, respectively), although more prevalent in the first month of follow-up in patients with presence of bactDNA (0 versus 4/7). When considering patients with model for end-stage liver disease (MELD) score less than 15, mortality was significantly higher in those with presence of bactDNA. Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis developed similarly in patients with or without bactDNA at admission.

Conclusion:

The presence of bactDNA in a patient with cirrhosis during an ascitic episode is an indicator of poor prognosis. This fact may be related to the development of acute-on-chronic liver failure at short term and does not predict the development of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. (HEPATOLOGY 2008;48:1924-1931.) S pontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) is a lifethreatening complication in patients with cirrhosis. It has been defined as an ascitic fluid (AF) infection in the absence of any intraabdominal, surgi-cally treatable source of infection. 1 The accepted pathogenic theory of SBP postulates that bacteria of enteric origin cross the intestinal wall in a process that has been called bacterial translocation, reaching mes-


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