3.8 Article

Real-world evidence of long-term survival and healthcare resource use in patients with hepatic encephalopathy receiving rifaximin-α treatment: a retrospective observational extension study with long-term follow-up (IMPRESS II)

Journal

FRONTLINE GASTROENTEROLOGY
Volume 14, Issue 3, Pages 228-235

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/flgastro-2022-102221

Keywords

hepatic encephalopathy; liver cirrhosis; antibiotic therapy

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In clinical practice in the UK, the use of RFX in patients with HE was associated with a 35% survival rate, high treatment adherence, 76% transplant-free survival rate, minimal healthcare resource utilization, and low rates of complications at 5 years post-initiation.
ObjectiveTo describe survival of patients with hepatic encephalopathy (HE), up to 5 years after initiation of rifaximin-alpha (RFX) treatment. Design/MethodA retrospective, observational extension study within 9 National Health Service secondary/tertiary UK care centres. All patients had a clinical diagnosis of HE, were being treated with RFX and were included in the previous IMPRESS study which reported the 1-year experience. Demographics, clinical outcomes, selected cirrhosis-related complications, hospital admissions and attendances up to 5 years from RFX initiation were extracted from patient medical records and hospital electronic databases. The primary outcome measure was survival at 5 years post-initiation of RFX treatment. ResultsThe study included 138 patients. The survival rate at 5 years post-initiation of RFX was 35% (95% CI 28.2% to 44.4%) overall and 36% (95% CI 26.1% to 45.4%) for patients with alcohol-related liver disease. Median survival from RFX initiation was 2.8 years (95% CI 2.0 to 3.8; n=136). Among 48 patients alive at 5 years, 69% remained on RFX treatment at the end of the observation period, 74% reported no cirrhosis-related complications and 24% (9/37) had received a liver transplant. Between 1 and 5 years post-initiation, total numbers of liver-related emergency department visits, inpatient admissions, intensive care unit admissions and outpatient visits were 84, 194, 3 and 709, respectively; the liver-related 30-day readmission rate was 37%. ConclusionWithin UK clinical practice, RFX use in HE was associated with a 35% survival rate with high treatment adherence, 76% transplant-free survival rate, minimal healthcare resource and low rates of complications at 5 years post-initiation.

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