Drinking patterns, dependency and life-time drinking history in alcohol-related liver disease
Nick Sheron, Liver Unit, Division of Infection Inflammation and Repair, University of Southampton Medical School, Mailpoint 811, Southampton SO16 6YD, UK. E-mail: nick.sheron@soton.ac.uk
ABSTRACT
Aims To examine the hypothesis that increases in UK liver deaths are a result of episodic or binge drinking as opposed to regular harmful drinking.
Design A prospective survey of consecutive in-patients and out-patients.
Setting The liver unit of a teaching hospital in the South of England.
Participants A total of 234 consecutive in-patients and out-patients between October 2007 and March 2008.
Measurements Face-to-face interviews, Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test, 7-day drinking diary, Severity of Alcohol Dependence Questionnaire, Lifetime Drinking History and liver assessment.
Findings Of the 234 subjects, 106 had alcohol as a major contributing factor (alcoholic liver disease: ALD), 80 of whom had evidence of cirrhosis or progressive fibrosis. Of these subjects, 57 (71%) drank on a daily basis; only 10 subjects (13%) drank on fewer than 4 days of the week—of these, five had stopped drinking recently and four had cut down. In ALD patients two life-time drinking patterns accounted for 82% of subjects, increasing from youth (51%), and a variable drinking pattern (31%). ALD patients had significantly more drinking days and units/drinking day than non-ALD patients from the age of 20 years onwards.
Conclusions Increases in UK liver deaths are a result of daily or near-daily heavy drinking, not episodic or binge drinking, and this regular drinking pattern is often discernable at an early age.