Alcohol-related liver disease: A global perspective

IF 3.7 3区 医学 Q2 GASTROENTEROLOGY & HEPATOLOGY Annals of hepatology Pub Date : 2024-09-01 DOI:10.1016/j.aohep.2024.101499
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Abstract

Alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD) represents one of the deadliest yet preventable consequences of excessive alcohol use. It represents 5.1 % of the global burden of disease, mainly involving the productive-age population (15-44 years) and leading to an increased mortality risk from traffic road injuries, suicide, violence, cardiovascular disease, neoplasms, and liver disease, among others, accounting for 5.3 % of global deaths. Daily alcohol consumption, binge drinking (BD), and heavy episodic drinking (HED) are the patterns associated with a higher risk of developing ALD. The escalating global burden of ALD, even exceeding what was predicted, is the result of a complex interaction between the lack of public policies that regulate alcohol consumption, low awareness of the scope of the disease, late referral to specialists, underuse of available medications, insufficient funds allocated to ALD research, and non-predictable events such as the COVID-19 pandemic, where increases of up to 477 % in online alcohol sales were registered in the United States. Early diagnosis, referral, and treatment are pivotal to achieving the therapeutic goal in patients with alcohol use disorder (AUD) and ALD, where complete alcohol abstinence and prevention of alcohol relapse are expected to enhance overall survival. This can be achieved through a combination of cognitive behavioral, motivational enhancement and pharmacological therapy. Furthermore, the appropriate use of available pharmacological therapy and implementation of public policies that comprehensively address this disease will make a real difference.

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酒精相关肝病:全球视角
酒精相关性肝病(ALD)是过度饮酒造成的最致命但却可以预防的后果之一。它占全球疾病负担的 5.1%,主要涉及生产年龄人口(15-44 岁),并导致交通道路伤害、自杀、暴力、心血管疾病、肿瘤和肝病等死亡风险增加,占全球死亡人数的 5.3%。日常饮酒、暴饮暴食(BD)和大量偶发性饮酒(HED)是与罹患 ALD 风险较高相关的饮酒方式。ALD 在全球造成的负担不断加重,甚至超过了人们的预测,这是由于缺乏规范饮酒的公共政策、对该疾病范围的认识不足、转诊到专科医生的时间过晚、现有药物使用不足、分配给 ALD 研究的资金不足,以及诸如 COVID-19 大流行等不可预测事件之间复杂互动的结果。早期诊断、转诊和治疗对于实现酒精使用障碍(AUD)和 ALD 患者的治疗目标至关重要,完全戒酒和预防复酒有望提高患者的总体生存率。这可以通过认知行为疗法、动机强化疗法和药物疗法相结合来实现。此外,适当使用现有的药物疗法和实施全面应对这一疾病的公共政策将带来真正的改变。
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来源期刊
Annals of hepatology
Annals of hepatology 医学-胃肠肝病学
CiteScore
7.90
自引率
2.60%
发文量
183
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Annals of Hepatology publishes original research on the biology and diseases of the liver in both humans and experimental models. Contributions may be submitted as regular articles. The journal also publishes concise reviews of both basic and clinical topics.
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