Background: Overt hepatic encephalopathy (OHE) is a frequent complication of decompensated cirrhosis.
Aims: A multicenter prospective observational study was performed to assess the most commonly recorded presenting manifestations of OHE and its associated health-care burden.
Methods: Qualifying patients must have experienced ≥1 OHE episode within 30 days of enrollment (qualifying OHE) and were followed for recurrence (on-study OHE).
Results: Two hundred and sixty-five patients were enrolled at 30 sites and followed for up to 9 months (mean 72 days). Seventy-two patients experienced 122 on-study episodes; with 72, 23, and 13 having ≥1, ≥2, or ≥3 on-study episodes with median days to occurrence of the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd episode of 34, 19, and 11, respectively. The most frequently recorded OHE manifestations included confusion (78 %), change in mental status (57 %), disorientation (48 %), lethargy (46 %), and asterixis (45 %). West Haven grade was used inconsistently and recorded for only 28 % of episodes. Most qualifying and on-study episodes occurred on rifaximin (60 and 82 %, respectively) and were associated with hospitalization (68 and 85 %, respectively). Twenty-three patients experienced ≥2 on-study episodes within 2 months of enrollment on average (median 45 days) and accounted for 60 % of on-study episodes.
Conclusions: In this prospective study, OHE's most commonly recorded presenting manifestations included confusion, altered mental status, disorientation, lethargy, and asterixis. As reflected by frequent recurrence and hospitalizations, OHE, particularly the approximately 10 % of "high-resource-utilizing" patients with frequent recurrence, continues to pose a major unmet medical need and health-care burden despite the use of rifaximin.
Keywords: Altered mental status; Chronic liver disease; Cirrhosis; Clinical trial; Health-care burden; Liver failure; Pharmacoeconomics.