Language

English

Publication Date

6-1-2025

Journal

Hepatology Communications

DOI

10.1097/HC9.0000000000000701

PMID

40434634

PMCID

PMC12122176

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

5-29-2025

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-print

Abstract

Background: Sarcopenia is a syndrome of severe muscle wasting, associated with adverse outcomes related to liver transplantation (LT). There are several approaches used to identify sarcopenia. We aimed to investigate the prevalence of sarcopenia using 3 different criteria and determine how these performed in relation to clinical outcomes.

Methods: The cohort study included 237 adults with cirrhosis referred for LT. Sarcopenia was identified using (1) CT-defined; and the (2) original and (3) updated European Working Group on Sarcopenia in Older People criteria (EWGSOP1 and 2). Logistic regression was used to estimate OR and 95% CI for the relationships between sarcopenia and receiving an LT, unplanned admissions pre-LT, surgical complications, and length of stay for the LT admission. Fine-Gray competing risk analysis explored the impact of sarcopenia on receiving an LT and unplanned admissions. The AUC determined the predictive utility of the criteria.

Results: The prevalence of CT-defined sarcopenia (52%) was more than twice and 4-fold that of EWGSOP1-defined (22%) and EWGSOP2-defined (11%) sarcopenia, respectively. No criteria demonstrated a significant association with time to LT nor the time to unplanned admissions pre-LT. Similarly, none of the 3 criteria had superior predictive utility for the clinical outcomes for unplanned hospital admissions pre-LT of receiving an LT, with all 3 criteria having identical moderate AUCs for unplanned admissions (0.70) and similar weak AUCs (≤0.55) for the likelihood of receiving an LT.

Conclusions: Sarcopenia in patients undergoing LT evaluation is prevalent. EWGSOP criteria appear to offer no advantage over CT-only criteria in identifying patients at increased risk of adverse LT outcomes. Bedside measures of muscle function may be of benefit in tracking the effectiveness of interventions targeting sarcopenia.

Keywords

Humans, Sarcopenia, Liver Transplantation, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Liver Cirrhosis, Aged, Postoperative Complications, Risk Assessment, Adult, Length of Stay, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, advanced liver disease, cirrhosis, clinical risk assessment, low muscle mass, muscle wasting

Published Open-Access

yes

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