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Extracorporeal albumin dialysis. |
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Extracorporeal albumin dialysis.
Hepatol Res. 2008 Nov;38
Rifai K.
Department of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Endocrinology, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany.
Patients
with liver failure still present a high mortality. It can only be
significantly improved by the rare resource of liver transplantation.
Extracorporeal liver support devices have been developed to temporarily
support liver detoxification. Artificial devices without hepatocytes
("liver dialysis" or "albumin dialysis") are already widely used in
Europe. The two best-known systems, MARS and Prometheus, use a
different technical approach to remove water-soluble as well as
albumin-bound toxins from the blood. In MARS, toxins diffuse along a
concentration gradient through an albumin-impermeable membrane into a
secondary circuit that is pre-filled with an albumin solution. The
albumin is continuously "recycled" inside the secondary circuit by
different adsorber and low flux dialysis.
In contrast, Prometheus
includes an albumin-permeable filter allowing separation of the albumin
fraction into the secondary circuit where the albumin-bound toxins are
directly removed by two adsorbers. Thereafter, high flux dialysis is
performed inside the primary circuit. For both extracorporeal systems,
an improvement of hepatic encephalopathy and biochemical markers such
as bilirubin is consistently reported. In-vivo comparisons of both
systems showed significantly higher extraction capacities for
protein-bound and water-soluble substances under Prometheus than under
MARS treatment. Possible pathophysiological mechanisms could be a
reduction of portal pressure or a removal of vasoactive cytokines.
However, only few randomised controlled trials with low patient numbers
and conflictive results regarding patient survival exist. Nevertheless,
a Cochrane meta-analysis revealed a significant survival benefit for
extracorporeal liver support devices in patients with acute-on-chronic
liver failure. Other promising indications are severe refractory
cholestatic pruritus, intoxication with protein-bound substances and
graft dysfunction after liver transplantation. As large randomised
controlled multi-center trials are currently underway, better evidence
will be available soon to define the clinical role of extracorporeal
liver support devices.
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