Abstract:
Introduction. Cirrhosis represents the culmination of decades of liver injury and is thought to represent an irreversible disease.
The clinical course of cirrhosis includes several disease states which require multistate models and competing risks analysis for
proper assessment. Clinical states are defined according to the type of decompensation and increasing mortality. The traditional
multistate models of cirrhosis have been validated in several studies and are currently widely used in clinical practice but mainly
focus on the natural history of patients that are relatively stable.
Aim of study. Liver cirrhosis is characterized by a silent phase until decompensation, which is defined by ascites, bleeding from
esophageal varices or hepatic encephalopathy. Herein, we aimed to analyze and characterize the clinical course and survival in
cirrhosis.
Methods and materials. An advanced search was performed in the PubMed, Medline, and ScienceDirect databases, taking into
account relevant articles, published in the last 10 years. The search English terms used were: ”Cirrhosis”,”Portal
hypertension”,”Clinical states”,” Multistate model”,”Prognosis”
Results. Cirrhosis is classified as compensated or decompensated, based on the absence or presence of complication such as
variceal bleeding, ascites, jaundice or encephalopathy. More recently, it has been recognized that increasing portal hypertension
and several major clinical events are followed by a marked worsening in prognosis, and disease states have been proposed
accordingly in a multistate model. The clinical course of cirrhosis may not be considered as unidirectional anymore . Aetiological
treatment of cirrhosis may halt or even reverse the clinical course of the disease, particularly when it is still in a compensated
state. Therefore, watchful follow-up of patients in whom the cause of cirrhosis has been successfully treated is recommended.
Several clinical conditions associated with significantly different outcomes have been proposed as relevant clinical states during
the course of the disease. Clinical states of cirrhosis are based on distinct outcome patterns and have a prognostic classification
value. The progression of cirrhosis across clinical states is not predictable, although it parallels the progression of liver damage
with its haemodynamic, inflammatory and functional consequences. However, it is notable that there is no predictable sequence
of such clinical states and that they may not be considered as progressive disease stages. However, clinical states enable the
classification of patients according to increasing mortality risk. Moreover, assessing transitions across states may facilitate the
description of the clinical course of the disease in a multistate model. Compensated cirrhosis without varices (state 1). This is
the earliest clinical state with a low incidence rate of decompensation and very low mortality. Compensated cirrhosis with varices
(state 2). These patients are at risk of variceal bleeding and decompensation. Thus, they require a different monitoring schedule
and specific treatment according to the severity of risk. Variceal bleeding (state 3). Patients with bleeding alone have better
outcomes than patients with ascites without bleeding, and much better outcomes than patients with bleeding and ascites. First
non-bleeding decompensation (state 4). Ascites is the most frequent first non-bleeding decompensating event and is in fact
considered the hallmark of decompensation. Further decompensation (state 5). Following any first decompensating event, most
patients develop further decompensation before dying. The most frequent combination is bleeding and ascites, although jaundice
and encephalopathy are also frequent. Late advanced decompensation (state 6). The progressive increase in splanchnic
vasodilatation, hyperdynamic circulation, bacterial translocation and systemic inflammation result in a more advanced, late
decompensation state where multi-organ dysfunction becomes clinically evident.
Conclusion. The development of multistate models implies the assessment of the probabilities of more than one possible
outcome from each disease state. Recognising different clinical states of cirrhosis may have important implications on the most
likely clinical outcomes. Hence, clinical states may be used to inform treatment interventions to prevent disease progression.