Fact checked byHeather Biele

Read more

October 27, 2023
2 min read
Save

Treatment for alcohol use disorder linked to lower odds for mortality in patients with ALD

Fact checked byHeather Biele
You've successfully added to your alerts. You will receive an email when new content is published.

Click Here to Manage Email Alerts

We were unable to process your request. Please try again later. If you continue to have this issue please contact customerservice@slackinc.com.

Key takeaways:

  • Patients who received treatment for alcohol use disorder after a hospital encounter for ALD had reduced mortality.
  • Older age, higher index CCI score and cirrhosis were associated with increased mortality.
Perspective from Shreya Sengupta, MD

VANCOUVER, British Columbia — A diagnosis of and treatment for alcohol use disorder after a hospital encounter for alcohol-associated liver disease correlated with lower odds for mortality, according to a presenter here.

“In recent years, particularly in the United States, there has been an increased incidence of and mortality from alcohol-associated liver disease,” Elizabeth Harris, MD, a first-year GI fellow at Marshall University, said at the ACG Annual Scientific Meeting. “A number of studies have shown that many patients with alcohol-associated liver disease, or ALD, do not actually receive any treatment for their underlying alcohol use disorder.

“Our findings suggest that patients with ALD may really benefit from recognition of their AUD as a medical problem that also needs medical treatment,” Elizabeth Harris, MD, said at the ACG Annual Scientific Meeting.
“Our findings suggest that patients with ALD may really benefit from recognition of their AUD as a medical problem that also needs medical treatment,” Elizabeth Harris, MD, said at the ACG Annual Scientific Meeting.
Image: Healio

“It’s common clinical practice to just treat the decompensating events that occur with liver disease, but to neglect the underlying use disorder.”

To assess the association between alcohol use disorder (AUD) treatment and clinical outcomes in ALD, Harris and colleagues used the private insurance claims database Truven to identify 40,777 beneficiaries with an inpatient ALD encounter between January 2009 and June 2019. After excluding those who had previous exposure to medication, researchers matched 2,820 beneficiaries who received at least one medication for AUD after index admission (35.1% women) with 2,820 who did not receive a prescription (31.4% women).

Most patients (42%) were prescribed gabapentin, followed by naltrexone (14%), acamprosate (12%), baclofen (7%), disulfiram (5%) and topiramate (4%). Harris noted that 16% of beneficiaries received multiple medications.

Post-index encounter analysis showed that those who did not receive medication for AUD had higher likelihood of mortality compared with those who did receive medication (6.5% vs. 2.1%) while post-index encounter AUD (61% vs. 81%) and psychiatric disorders (53% vs. 75%) were higher among those in the treatment group.

Stratified by mortality, unadjusted analysis demonstrated that older age, higher index Charlson Comorbidity Index score, and diagnoses of cirrhosis and hepatic encephalopathy at the index encounter were associated with increased mortality, while a diagnosis of hepatitis was negatively associated with mortality.

In addition, a higher proportion of patients with no mortality had a diagnosis of alcohol abuse at the index encounter and had at least one AUD medication prescribed after the index encounter for ALD.

“Our findings suggest that patients with ALD may really benefit from recognition of their AUD as a medical problem that also needs medical treatment,” Harris concluded. “We feel that further studies are warranted to address whether instituting AUD treatment as part of the standard-of-care management of ALD can improve outcomes for this worsening health care problem.”