Liver dialysis

Revision as of 18:38, 18 July 2016 by Anthony Gallo (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

WikiDoc Resources for Liver dialysis

Articles

Most recent articles on Liver dialysis

Most cited articles on Liver dialysis

Review articles on Liver dialysis

Articles on Liver dialysis in N Eng J Med, Lancet, BMJ

Media

Powerpoint slides on Liver dialysis

Images of Liver dialysis

Photos of Liver dialysis

Podcasts & MP3s on Liver dialysis

Videos on Liver dialysis

Evidence Based Medicine

Cochrane Collaboration on Liver dialysis

Bandolier on Liver dialysis

TRIP on Liver dialysis

Clinical Trials

Ongoing Trials on Liver dialysis at Clinical Trials.gov

Trial results on Liver dialysis

Clinical Trials on Liver dialysis at Google

Guidelines / Policies / Govt

US National Guidelines Clearinghouse on Liver dialysis

NICE Guidance on Liver dialysis

NHS PRODIGY Guidance

FDA on Liver dialysis

CDC on Liver dialysis

Books

Books on Liver dialysis

News

Liver dialysis in the news

Be alerted to news on Liver dialysis

News trends on Liver dialysis

Commentary

Blogs on Liver dialysis

Definitions

Definitions of Liver dialysis

Patient Resources / Community

Patient resources on Liver dialysis

Discussion groups on Liver dialysis

Patient Handouts on Liver dialysis

Directions to Hospitals Treating Liver dialysis

Risk calculators and risk factors for Liver dialysis

Healthcare Provider Resources

Symptoms of Liver dialysis

Causes & Risk Factors for Liver dialysis

Diagnostic studies for Liver dialysis

Treatment of Liver dialysis

Continuing Medical Education (CME)

CME Programs on Liver dialysis

International

Liver dialysis en Espanol

Liver dialysis en Francais

Business

Liver dialysis in the Marketplace

Patents on Liver dialysis

Experimental / Informatics

List of terms related to Liver dialysis

Template:Interventions infobox

This article specifically discusses liver dialysis. For information regarding kidney dialysis or dialysis in general, please click here.

Overview

Liver dialysis is a detoxification treatment for liver failure and has shown promise for patients with hepatorenal syndrome. It is similar to hemodialysis and based on the same principles. Like a bioartificial liver device, it is a form of artificial extracorporeal liver support.

A critical issue of the clinical syndrome in liver failure is the accumulation of toxins not cleared by the failing liver. Based on this hypothesis, the removal of lipophilic, albumin-bound substances such as bilirubin, bile acids, metabolites of aromatic amino acids, medium-chain fatty acids and cytokines should be beneficial to the clinical course of a patient in liver failure. This led to the development of artificial filtration and adsorption devices.

Hemodialysis is used for renal failure and primarily removes water soluble toxins, however it does not remove toxins bound to albumin that accumulate in liver failure.

Liver dialysis prognosis/survival

Whilst the technique is in its infancy, the prognosis of patients with liver failure remains guarded. Liver dialysis, currently, is only considered to be a bridge to transplantation or liver regeneration (in the case of acute liver failure)[1][2][3] and, unlike kidney dialysis (for renal failure), cannot support a patient for an extended period of time (months to years).

Liver dialysis devices

Artificial detoxification devices currently under clinical evaluation include the Molecular Adsorbent Recirculating System (MARS), Single Pass Albumin Dialysis (SPAD) and the Prometheus system.

Molecular Adsorbents Recirculation System (MARS)

The Molecular Adsorbents Recirculation System (MARS), developed by Teraklin AG of Germany, is the best known extracorporal liver dialysis system and has existed for approximately ten years. It consists of two separate dialysis circuits. The first circuit consists of human serum albumin, is in contact with the patient's blood through a semipermeable membrane and has two special filters to clean the albumin after it has absorbed toxins from the patient's blood. The second circuit consists of a hemodialysis machine and is used to clean the albumin in the first circuit, before it is recirculated to the semipermeable membrane in contact with the patient's blood. The MARS system can remove a number of toxins, including ammonia, bile acids, bilirubin, copper, iron and phenols.

MARS development started at the University of Rostock in Germany. It has 510 (k) approval from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for drug overdoses and poisoning as of June 2005 and is available in the USA since the end of 2005.[1] Canada's first MARS unit arrived at the Toronto General Hospital in 2005.

Single Pass Albumin Dialysis (SPAD)

Single pass albumin dialysis (SPAD) is a simple method of albumin dialysis using standard renal replacement therapy machines without an additional perfusion pump system: The patient’s blood flows through a circuit with a high-flux hollow fiber hemodiafilter, identical to that used in the MARS system. The other side of this membrane is cleansed with an albumin solution in counter-directional flow, which is discarded after passing the filter. Hemodialysis can be performed in the first circuit via the same high-flux hollow fibers.

Comparing SPAD, MARS and CVVHDF

SPAD, MARS and continuous veno-venous haemodiafiltration (CVVHDF) were compared in vitro with regard to detoxification capacity.[4] SPAD and CVVHDF showed a significantly greater reduction of ammonia compared with MARS. No significant differences could be observed between SPAD, MARS and CVVHDF concerning other water-soluble substances. However, SPAD enabled a significantly greater bilirubin reduction than MARS. Bilirubin serves as an important marker substance for albumin-bound (non water-soluble) substances. Concerning the reduction of bile acids no significant differences between SPAD and MARS were seen. It was concluded that the detoxification capacity of SPAD is similar or even higher when compared with the more sophisticated, more complex and hence more expensive MARS.

As albumin dialysis is a costly procedure, financial aspects are important: For a seven-hour treatment with MARS, approximately € 300 for 600 ml human serum albumin solution (20%), € 1740 for a MARS treatment kit and € 125 for disposables used by the dialysis machine have to be spent. The cost of this therapy adds up to approximately € 2165. Performing SPAD according to the protocol by Sauer et al., however, requires 1000 ml of human albumin solution (20%) at a cost of € 500. A high-flux dialyzer costing approximately € 40 and the tubings (€ 125) must also be purchased. The overall costs of a SPAD treatment is approximately € 656 - 30% of the costs of an equally efficient MARS therapy session. The expenditure for the MARS monitor necessary to operate the MARS disposables is not included in this calculation.

Prometheus

The Prometheus system (Fresenius Medical Care, Bad Homburg, Germany) is a new device based on the combination of albumin adsorption with high-flux hemodialysis after selective filtration of the albumin fraction through a specific polysulfon filter (AlbuFlow). It has been studied[5] in a group of eleven patients with hepatorenal syndrome (acute-on-chronic liver failure and accompanying renal failure). The treatment for two consecutive days for more than four hours significantly improved serum levels of conjugated bilirubin, bile acids, ammonia, cholinesterase, creatinine, urea and blood pH. Prometheus was proven to be a safe supportive therapy for patients with liver failure.

References

  1. O'grady J. Personal view: current role of artificial liver support devices. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2006 Jun 1;23(11):1549-57. PMID 16696802.
  2. van de Kerkhove MP, Hoekstra R, Chamuleau RA, van Gulik TM. Clinical application of bioartificial liver support systems. Ann Surg. 2004 Aug;240(2):216-30. PMID 15273544. Free Full Text.
  3. Neuberger J. Prediction of survival for patients with fulminant hepatic failure. Hepatology. 2005 Jan;41(1):19-22. PMID 15690476.
  4. Sauer IM, Goetz M, Steffen I, Walter G, Kehr DC, Schwartlander R, Hwang YJ, Pascher A, Gerlach JC, Neuhaus P.: In vitro comparison of the molecular adsorbent recirculation system (MARS) and single-pass albumin dialysis (SPAD). Hepatology. 2004 May;39(5):1408-14. PMID 15122770.
  5. Rifai K, Ernst T, Kretschmer U, Bahr MJ, Schneider A, Hafer C, Haller H, Manns MP, Fliser D. Prometheus--a new extracorporeal system for the treatment of liver failure. J Hepatol. 2003 Dec;39(6):984-90. PMID 14642616.

Related Chapters

External Links

MARS

  • Gambro - the manufacturer of the MARS.
  • MARS - Molecular Adsorbent Recycling System (Teraklin) - a description of the MARS.
  • MARS-Leberdialyse - has a picture of the MARS in action.
  • Evenepoel P, Maes B, Wilmer A, Nevens F, Fevery J, Kuypers D, Bammens B, Vanrenterghem Y. Detoxifying capacity and kinetics of the molecular adsorbent recycling system. Contribution of the different inbuilt filters. Blood Purif. 2003;21(3):244-52. PMID 12784051
  • Mitzner S, Klammt S, Stange J, Noldge-Schomburg GF, Schmidt R. [Extracorporeal blood purification in severe liver failure with the albumin dialysis MARS -- impact on relevant intensive care parameters] Anasthesiol Intensivmed Notfallmed Schmerzther. 2005 Apr;40(4):199-206. PMID 15832238

SPAD

Prometheus

Template:Digestive system surgical procedures

de:Leberdialyse