UCLA
UCLA Previously Published Works
Title
Mind MELD or Ignore It at Your Peril.
Permalink
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5g00h2kz
Journal
JAMA surgery, 151(7)
ISSN
2168-6254
Author
Zarrinpar, Ali
Publication Date
2016-07-01
DOI
10.1001/jamasurg.2016.0839
Peer reviewed
eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library
University of California
Copyright 2016 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.
Invited Commentary
Mind MELD or Ignore It at Your Peril
Ali Zarrinpar, MD, PhD
Chronic liver disease (CLD) and its attendant increased risk of
operative mortality and morbidity give appropriate pause to
many surgeons and patients prior to undertaking any opera-
tion, especially an emer-
gency. While the American
College of Surgeons National
Surgical Quality Improve-
ment Project Surgical Risk
Calculator
1
does not yet incorporate liver disease–specific
measures, multiple previous studies have demonstrated the
importance of prognostic factors such as Child-Turcotte-Pugh
score, serum creatinine level, international normalized ratio,
cardiopulmonary comorbidities, and American Society of
Anesthesiologists physical status class.
2
Advances in the
medical care of patients with CLD and improved outcomes in
liver transplantation have made long-term survival in patients
who would not otherwise be considered for major surgery
quite possible. For these reasons, accurate prognostic models
of survival in cirrhotic patients are useful to clinicians.
One such prognostic model, the Mayo Clinic Model for End-
Stage Liver Disease (MELD) score, has performed well in a num-
ber of settings. Despite being initially based on survival after
transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt in a highly se-
lected group of patients with cirrhosis and without cardiopul-
monary comorbidity or intrinsic renal disease, the MELD score
provides a reliable estimate of short-term survival over a wide
range of liver disease severity and etiology and has become the
standard by which deceased donor liver grafts are allocated.
3
The MELD score has also been previously shown in a number
of studies to allow for the prediction of postoperative
outcomes.
4,5
In this issue of JAMA Surgery,Havensetal
6
add to that list
by showing that the MELD score is closely associated with mor-
tality following intensive care unit admission among emer-
gency general surgery patients with CLD. Focusing on more
than 700 patients admitted to the intensive care unit within
48 hours of emergency general surgery at 1 of 2 academic medi-
cal centers, they confirm that MELD scores can predict 90-
day mortality and that decreases in MELD scores after 48 hours
following intensive care unit admission can also predict out-
comes. Notwithstanding standard caveats regarding retro-
spective data analyses, their study goes far in confirming the
utility of the MELD score and elevating it above other preop-
erative prognostic factors such as age, organ failure, and ino-
tropic support.
Beyond sound statistical and clinical validity, the ideal
model for prognostic purposes should use a few inexpensive,
readily available, noninvasive, objective parameters. Further-
more, it should be generalizable to a diverse group of
patients, while maintaining the ability to discern gradations
within a continuum of risk. The model should be able to
assess the risk of death in independent groups of patients
with liver disease of varying etiology and severity and also to
incorporate sex, ethnic/racial, and geographical diversity.
While it appears to satisfy these criteria, the question
remains whether the MELD score, now entering its 16th year
of service, should be revised,
7
augmented, or replaced with
other measures of liver or global function.
8
Furthermore,
armed with this reliable preoperative predictor of mortality,
how should we use it? Are there ways to optimize some
patients before surgery in a way that would improve out-
comes and not just delay care? There are predictors of futility
in liver transplantation that allow for patient optimization.
9
Prognostic models should compel us to prospectively test
ways to improve the efficacy of care in general surgery
patients as well.
ARTICLE INFORMATION
Author Affiliation: Division of Liver and Pancreas
Transplantation, Department of Surgery, David
Geffen School of Medicine, University of California,
Los Angeles.
Corresponding Author: Ali Zarrinpar, MD, PhD,
Division of Liver and Pancreas Transplantation,
Department of Surgery, David Geffen School of
Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, 757
Westwood Plaza, Ste 8501, Los Angeles, CA 90095
(azarrinpar@mednet.ucla.edu).
Published Online: May 18, 2016.
doi:10.1001/jamasurg.2016.0839.
Conflict of Intere st Disclosures: None reported.
REFERENCES
1. American College of Surgeons. Surgical Risk
Calculator. http://riskcalculator.facs.org /. Accessed
April 22, 2016.
2. Ziser A, Plevak DJ, Wiesner RH, Rakela J, Offord
KP, Brown DL. Morbidity and mortality in cirrhotic
patients undergoing anesthesia and surgery.
Anesthesiology. 1999;90(1):42-53.
3. Kamath PS, Wiesner RH, Malinchoc M, et al.
A model to predict survival in patients with
end-stage liver disease. Hepatology. 2001;33(2):
464-470.
4. Teh SH, Nagorney DM, Stevens SR, et al. Risk
factors for mortality after surgery in patients with
cirrhosis. Gastroenterology. 2007;132(4):1261-1269.
5. Mayo Clinic. Post-operative mortality risk in
patients with cirrhosis. http://www.mayoclinic.org
/medical-professionals/model-end-stage-liver
-disease/post-operative-mortality-risk-patients
-cirrhosis. Accessed March 20, 2016.
6. Havens JM, Columbus AB, Olufajo OA, Askari R,
Salim A, Christopher KB. Association of Model for
End-Stage Liver Disease score with mortality in
emergency general surgery patients [published
online May 18, 2016]. JAMA Surg. doi:10.1001
/jamasurg.2016.0789.
7. Leise MD, Kim WR, Kremers WK, Larson JJ,
Benson JT, Therneau TM. A revised Model for
End-Stage Liver Disease optimizes prediction of
mortality among patients awaiting liver
transplantation. Gastroenterology. 2011;140(7):
1952-1960.
8. Mobley CM, Zarrinpar A. Portable device for the
analysis of liver function: a boon to liver surgery and
critical care. Expert Rev Med Devices. 2016;13(1):1-4.
9. Petrowsky H, Rana A, Kaldas FM, et al. Liver
transplantation in highest acuity recipients:
identifying factors to avoid futility. Ann Surg.2014;
259(6):1186-1194.
Related article at
jamasurgery.com
Mind MELD or Ignore It at Your Peril Invited Commentary
jamasurgery.com (Reprinted) JAMA Surgery July 2016 Volume 151, Number 7 1/1
Copyright 2016 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.
Downloaded From: http://jamanetwork.com/ by a University of California - Los Angeles User on 12/20/2016