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      Compensated liver cirrhosis: Natural course and disease-modifying strategies

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          Abstract

          Compensated liver cirrhosis (CLC) is defined as cirrhosis with one or more decompensating events, such as ascites, variceal haemorrhage, or hepatic encephalopathy. Patients with CLC are largely asymptomatic with preserved hepatic function. The transition from CLC to decompensated cirrhosis occurs as a result of a complex interaction between multiple predisposing and precipitating factors. The first decompensation event in CLC patients is considered a significant turning point in the progression of cirrhosis, as it signals a drastic decline in median survival rates from 10-12 years to only 1-2 years. Furthermore, early cirrhosis has the potential to regress as liver fibrosis is a dynamic condition. With the advent of effective non-invasive tools for detecting hepatic fibrosis, more and more patients with CLC are currently being recognised. This offers clinicians a unique opportunity to properly manage such patients in order to achieve cirrhosis regression or, at the very least, prevent its progression. There are numerous emerging approaches for preventing or delaying decompensation in CLC patients. A growing body of evidence indicates that treating the underlying cause can lead to cirrhosis regression, and the use of non-selective beta-blockers can prevent decompensation by lowering portal hypertension. Additionally, addressing various cofactors (such as obesity, diabetes, dyslipidaemia, and alcoholism) and precipitating factors (such as infection, viral hepatitis, and hepatotoxic drugs) that have a detrimental impact on the natural course of cirrhosis may benefit patients with CLC. However, high-quality data must be generated through well-designed and adequately powered randomised clinical trials to validate these disease-modifying techniques for CLC patients. This article discussed the natural history of CLC, risk factors for its progression, and therapeutic approaches that could alter the trajectory of CLC evolution and improve outcomes.

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          Most cited references135

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          Expanding consensus in portal hypertension: Report of the Baveno VI Consensus Workshop: Stratifying risk and individualizing care for portal hypertension.

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            Weight Loss Through Lifestyle Modification Significantly Reduces Features of Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis.

            It is not clear how weight loss affects histologic features of liver in patients with nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). We examined the association between the magnitude of weight loss through lifestyle modifications and changes in histologic features of NASH.
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              Alterations of the human gut microbiome in liver cirrhosis.

              Liver cirrhosis occurs as a consequence of many chronic liver diseases that are prevalent worldwide. Here we characterize the gut microbiome in liver cirrhosis by comparing 98 patients and 83 healthy control individuals. We build a reference gene set for the cohort containing 2.69 million genes, 36.1% of which are novel. Quantitative metagenomics reveals 75,245 genes that differ in abundance between the patients and healthy individuals (false discovery rate < 0.0001) and can be grouped into 66 clusters representing cognate bacterial species; 28 are enriched in patients and 38 in control individuals. Most (54%) of the patient-enriched, taxonomically assigned species are of buccal origin, suggesting an invasion of the gut from the mouth in liver cirrhosis. Biomarkers specific to liver cirrhosis at gene and function levels are revealed by a comparison with those for type 2 diabetes and inflammatory bowel disease. On the basis of only 15 biomarkers, a highly accurate patient discrimination index is created and validated on an independent cohort. Thus microbiota-targeted biomarkers may be a powerful tool for diagnosis of different diseases.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                World J Methodol
                WJM
                World Journal of Methodology
                Baishideng Publishing Group Inc
                2222-0682
                20 September 2023
                20 September 2023
                : 13
                : 4
                : 179-193
                Affiliations
                Department of Gastroenterology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Patna 801507, India. docrameshkr@ 123456gmail.com
                Department of Gastroenterology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Patna 801507, India
                Department of Gastroenterology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Patna 801507, India
                Author notes

                Author contributions: Kumar R designed the manuscript, collected data, and wrote the manuscript; Kumar S contributed to data collection and manuscript writing; Prakash SS contributed to data collection and assisted in the manuscript revision.

                Corresponding author: Ramesh Kumar, MD, Additional Professor, Department of Gastroenterology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, 4 th floor, IPD Block-C, Patna 801507, India. docrameshkr@ 123456gmail.com

                Article
                jWJM.v13.i4.pg179 85318
                10.5662/wjm.v13.i4.179
                10523240
                37771878
                8ca008ea-54e0-4aa9-a6f5-3d69066c0ff5
                ©The Author(s) 2023. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.

                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 BY-NC 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 non-commercial.

                History
                : 22 April 2023
                : 5 June 2023
                : 27 June 2023
                Categories
                Review

                compensated cirrhosis,compensated advanced chronic liver disease,clinical decompensation,cirrhosis reversal,disease-modifying agents,acute-on-chronic liver failure

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