Baylor University Medical Center, Dallas, TX.
Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.
Hepatology. 2021 May;73(5):2039-2050. doi: 10.1002/hep.31583.
Alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD) is a major driver of global liver related morbidity and mortality. There are 2.4 billion drinkers (950 million heavy drinkers) and the lifetime prevalence of any alcohol use disorder (AUD) is 5.1%-8.6%. In 2017, global prevalence of alcohol-associated compensated and decompensated cirrhosis was 23.6 million and 2.5 million, respectively. Combined, alcohol-associated cirrhosis and liver cancer account for 1% of all deaths worldwide with this burden expected to increase. Solutions for this growing epidemic must be multi-faceted and focused on both population and patient-level interventions. Reductions in ALD-related morbidity and mortality require solutions that focus on early identification and intervention, reducing alcohol consumption at the population level (taxation, reduced availability and restricted promotion), and solutions tailored to local socioeconomic realities (unrecorded alcohol consumption, focused youth education). Simple screening tools and algorithms can be applied at the population level to identify alcohol misuse, diagnose ALD using non-invasive serum and imaging markers, and risk-stratify higher-risk ALD/AUD patients. Novel methods of healthcare delivery and platforms are needed (telehealth, outreach, use of non-healthcare providers, partnerships between primary and specialty care/tertiary hospitals) to proactively mitigate the global burden of ALD. An integrated approach that combines medical and AUD treatment is needed at the individual level to have the highest impact. Future needs include (1) improving quality of ALD data and standardizing care, (2) supporting innovative healthcare delivery platforms that can treat both ALD and AUD, (3) stronger and concerted advocacy by professional hepatology organizations, and (4) advancing implementation of digital interventions.
酒精相关性肝病(ALD)是导致全球与肝脏相关发病率和死亡率的主要原因。全球有 24 亿饮酒者(9.5 亿重度饮酒者),终生任何程度的酒精使用障碍(AUD)患病率为 5.1%-8.6%。2017 年,全球酒精相关性代偿性和失代偿性肝硬化的患病率分别为 2360 万和 250 万。总的来说,酒精相关性肝硬化和肝癌占全球所有死亡人数的 1%,预计这一负担将会增加。针对这一日益严重的流行疾病,必须采取多方面的解决方案,重点关注人群和患者层面的干预措施。要降低 ALD 相关发病率和死亡率,就必须制定以早期识别和干预为重点、减少人群饮酒量(征税、减少供应和限制促销)、并针对当地社会经济现实情况制定解决方案(未记录的饮酒量、重点针对青年的教育)的解决方案。简单的筛选工具和算法可用于人群层面,以识别酒精滥用,使用非侵入性血清和成像标志物诊断 ALD,并对高危 ALD/AUD 患者进行风险分层。需要新的医疗保健提供方法和平台(远程医疗、外展服务、利用非医疗保健提供者、基层医疗和专科医疗/三级医院之间的合作),以积极减轻全球 ALD 负担。在个人层面上,需要采用综合性方法,将医疗和 AUD 治疗相结合,才能产生最大的影响。未来的需求包括:(1)提高 ALD 数据的质量并规范护理,(2)支持能够同时治疗 ALD 和 AUD 的创新医疗保健提供平台,(3)由专业肝脏病学组织加强和协调宣传,(4)推进数字干预措施的实施。