Comments on “Effect of type 2 diabetes mellitus in the prognosis of acute-on-chronic liver failure patients in China”

2022-06-11 07:37WeiWangChenChenPanWenYingZhaoJinYuShengQiQiWuSiSiChen
World Journal of Gastroenterology 2022年14期

Wei Wang, Chen-Chen Pan, Wen-Ying Zhao, Jin-Yu Sheng,Qi-Qi Wu, Si-Si Chen

Abstract A study addressing the influence of type 2 diabetes on the prognosis of acute-onchronic liver failure patients was reviewed. Some statistical deficiencies were found in the reviewed article, and the sample size was too small to support the study. In addition, age should have been considered as one of the prognostic factors.

Key Words: Type 2 diabetes mellitus; Liver failure; Complication; Prognosis; Age

Figure 1 Cumulative survival time in acute-on-chronic liver failure patients with diabetic mellitus and non-diabetic mellitus[1 ]. Citation: Lai RM, Chen TB, Hu YH, Wu G, Zheng Q. Effect of type 2 diabetic mellitus in the prognosis of acute-on-chronic liver failure patients in China. World J Gastroenterol 2021 ; 27 : 3372 -3385 . Copyright© The Authors 2020 . Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc.

TO THE EDITOR

We were pleased to read the high-level article published by Laiet al[1 ]. The results of their study showed a significant relationship between the prognosis of diabetes mellitus (DM) and acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) patients. ACLF patients with DM have higher in-hospital mortality and infection rates than patients without DM. This is an important study that has made a significant contribution to the study of prognostic indicators for ACLF patients. However, there are still questionable issues in this study that we would like to discuss with the authors.

First, the Materials and Methods section needs to be more detailed and refined. The author should list the number of diabetic patients included and the number of people after grouping. The author should state the time for follow-up of the patients and redefine the concept of follow-up. If the author regards the discharge time as the end of the follow-up event, it may cause data loss. Therefore, another reference could be added for loss to follow-up. We notice that they performed multivariate analysis on parameters withP< 0 .1 in univariate analysis, which is not convincing. A P value less than 0 .05 would make the results more convincing. In addition, a sample of 200 for a study period of 7 years is small; the author should calculate the population size and analyze the sample size.

There are problems in the statistical analyses. Statistical analyses should be described in detail. In the table in the Results section, the author should provide more accurate statistical values, such as Student’st-values orχ2values. Table 1 shows that there are statistical differences in age between the DM group and non-DM group. Therefore, the author should describe the frequency and distribution of age in more detail and discuss the possible impact of age as a potential risk factor on the disease. For example, the author could divide the patients into different levels in the DM and non-DM groups according to age and statistically analyze the impact of different ages in each level on the mortality and infection rate of related diseases. According to the criteria of the World Health Organization in 2012 [1 ,2 ], a younger age was defined as less than 45 years, and an older age was defined as greater or equal to 45 years.Therefore, the author could divide the original two groups into four groups. In Figure 1 (Figure in the manuscript "Effect of type 2 diabetes mellitus in the prognosis of acute-on-chronic liver failure patients in China"[1 ]), the author should indicate the time unit. We do not know how long the patients lived. In addition, we also noticed that the author did not indicate the correspondingPvalue when stating some conclusions.

In the paper, the author repeatedly proposed that DM could predict ACLF. This is a confusing statement. The study only proves that DM has a certain influence on ACLF. To further predict ACLF through DM, a survival model would need to be established. The author should provide more detailed data, such as median follow-up and survival times, to build up the survival model.

In the Discussion section, the author explained that albumin (ALB) has nothing to do with the prognosis of liver failure in this study and believed that exogenous injection of ALB interfered with the experimental results. Inferring from this, we believe that the author neglected interference caused by the patients’ medications on the experimental results during treatment. ALB constitutes about half of serum proteins. ALB is involved in scavenging free radicals, maintaining colloidal osmotic pressure and protecting neuronal cells and is closely related to nutritional level[3 ] and systemic inflammatory

response[4 ]. The author should describe in detail in the Methods section the type, dosage and method of drug injection during the treatment process. Actually, well-established indications for the use of human ALB in patients with cirrhosis pertain to conditions that are characterized by an acute deterioration of effective hypovolemia[5 ], such as renal dysfunction secondary to spontaneous bacterial peritonitis and hepatorenal syndrome, as shown by the international guidelines on the management of decompensated cirrhosis[6 ]. The current established indications for ALB use in patients with cirrhosis, such as preventing renal dysfunction induced by systolic blood pressure, suggest that patients should receive 1 .5 g/kg body weight at diagnosis +1 g/kg body weight at day 3 [7 ].

Table 1 Demographic characteristics and clinical features of the patients between diabetic mellitus and non-diabetic mellitus[1 ]

All in all, this is a high-level article in the field of diabetes and liver cirrhosis. Although there are some statistical deficiencies in the article, the author may be able to expand the sample and establish a multicenter prospective cohort study. For example, age factors could be considered for related diseases to evaluate the impact of DM on the prognosis in ACLF patients.

FOOTNOTES

Author contributions:Wang W and Chen SS contributed equally to this work; Wang W, Chen SS, Pan CC, Zhao WY,Sheng JY and Wu QQ designed the research study; Wang W, Chen SS, Pan CC and Zhao WY performed the research;Wang W and Chen SS contributed to new reagents and analytic tools; Wang W, Pan CC and Zhao WY analyzed the data and wrote the manuscript; All authors have read and approve the final manuscript.

Conflict-of-interest statement:Each author has reviewed the statement by the Baishideng Publishing Group on conflict of interest, and every author stated that there is no conflict of interest.

Open-Access:This article is an open-access article that was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial (CC BYNC 4 .0 ) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is noncommercial. See: https://creativecommons.org/Licenses/by-nc/4 .0 /

Country/Territory of origin:China

ORCID number:Wei Wang 0000 -0001 -5630 -3287 ; Chen-Chen Pan 0000 -0001 -8234 -6870 ; Wen-Ying Zhao 0000 -0002 -8190 -2561 ; Jin-Yu Sheng 0000 -0002 -6132 -4637 ; Qi-Qi Wu 0000 -0002 -4997 -1022 ; Si-Si Chen 0000 -0003 -0125 -8022 .

S-Editor:Fan JR

L-Editor:Filipodia

P-Editor:Fan JR