Ammonia and urea metabolism in acute liver failure: A multicentre cohort study

Author:

Cardoso Filipe S.12ORCID,Toapanta David3,Jimenez Natalia3ORCID,Fidalgo Pedro4,Figueiredo António5,Valdivieso Miriam3,Germano Nuno2,Rule Jody A.6ORCID,Lee William M.6ORCID,Abraldes Juan G.7ORCID,Reverter Enric3ORCID,Karvellas Constantine J.7

Affiliation:

1. Transplant Unit, Intensive Care Unit, Nova Medical School Curry Cabral Hospital Lisbon Portugal

2. Intensive Care Unit Curry Cabral Hospital Lisbon Portugal

3. Liver ICU, Liver Unit Clinic Hospital Barcelona Spain

4. Intensive Care Unit São Francisco Xavier Hospital Lisbon Portugal

5. Pathological Anatomy Department Curry Cabral Hospital Lisbon Portugal

6. Department of Internal Medicine University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center Dallas Texas USA

7. Liver Unit University of Alberta Hospital Edmonton Alberta Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackground & AimsAmmonia is metabolized into urea in the liver. In acute liver failure (ALF), ammonia has been associated with survival. However, urea variation has been poorly studied.MethodsObservational cohort including ALF patients from Curry Cabral Hospital (Lisbon, Portugal) and Clinic Hospital (Barcelona, Spain) between 10/2010 and 01/2023. The United States ALF Study Group cohort was used for external validation. Primary exposures were serum ammonia and urea on ICU admission. Primary endpoint was 30‐day transplant‐free survival (TFS). Secondary endpoint was explanted liver weight.ResultsAmong 191 ALF patients, median (IQR) age was 46 (32; 57) years and 85 (44.5%) were males. Overall, 86 (45.0%) patients were transplanted and 75 (39.3%) died. Among all ALF patients, following adjustment for age, sex, body weight, and aetiology, higher ammonia or lower urea was independently associated with higher INR on ICU admission (p < .009). Among all ALF patients, following adjustment for sex, aetiology, and lactate, higher ammonia was independently associated with lower TFS (adjusted odds ratio (95% confidence interval [CI]) = 0.991 (0.985; 0.997); p = .004). This model predicted TFS with good discrimination (area under receiver operating curve [95% CI] = 0.78 [0.75; 0.82]) and reasonable calibration (R2 of 0.43 and Brier score of 0.20) after external validation. Among transplanted patients, following adjustment for age, sex, actual body weight, and aetiology, higher ammonia (p = .024) or lower (p < .001) urea was independently associated with lower explanted liver weight.ConclusionsAmong ALF patients, serum ammonia and urea were associated with ALF severity. A score incorporating serum ammonia predicted TFS reasonably well.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

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