Ten years of hospital admissions for liver cirrhosis in Portugal


Autoria(s): Silva, Mário J.; Rosa, Matilde V.; Nogueira, Paulo; Calinas, Filipe
Data(s)

28/07/2016

28/07/2016

2015

Resumo

Background and aims More data on epidemiology of liver diseases in Europe are needed. We aimed to characterize hospital admissions for liver cirrhosis in Portugal during the past decade. Patients and methods We analyzed all hospital admissions for cirrhosis in Portugal Mainland between 2003 and 2012 registered in the national Diagnosis-Related Group database. Cirrhosis was classified according to etiology considering alcohol, hepatitis B, and hepatitis C. Results Between 2003 and 2012, there were 63 910 admissions for cirrhosis in Portugal Mainland; 74.4% involved male patients. Etiologies of admitted cirrhosis were as follows: 76.0% alcoholic, 1.1% hepatitis B, 1.4% hepatitis B plus alcohol, 3.6% hepatitis C, and 4.0% hepatitis C plus alcohol. There was a significant decline (P <0.001) in admissions for alcoholic cirrhosis, whereas hospitalizations for cirrhosis caused by hepatitis C or hepatitis C plus alcohol increased by almost 50% (P <0.001). Patients admitted with alcoholic plus hepatitis B or C cirrhosis were significantly younger than those with either alcoholic or viral cirrhosis (53.1 vs. 59.4 years, respectively, P <0.001). Hospitalization rates for cirrhosis were 124.4/100 000 in men and 32.6/100 000 in women. Hepatocellular carcinoma and fluid retention were more common in viral cirrhosis, whereas encephalopathy and variceal bleeding were more frequent in alcoholic cirrhosis. Hepatorenal syndrome was the strongest predictor of mortality among cirrhosis complications (odds ratio 12.97; 95% confidence interval 11.95–14.09). In-hospital mortality was 15.2%. Conclusion Despite the decline in admissions for alcoholic cirrhosis and the increase in those related to hepatitis C, the observed burden of hospitalized liver cirrhosis in Portugal was essentially attributable to alcoholic liver disease.

Identificador

0954-691X

http://hdl.handle.net/10400.26/14384

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Wolters Kluwer

Relação

http://journals.lww.com/eurojgh/Abstract/2015/11000/Ten_years_of_hospital_admissions_for_liver.13.aspx

Direitos

closedAccess

Palavras-Chave #Cirrose #Mortalidade #Internamento #Portugal
Tipo

article