Department of Health Data Science, Institute of Population Health, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK
Gastroenterology Department, Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Liverpool, UK.
BMJ Open. 2023 Nov 22;13(11):e076955. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-076955.
To examine time trends in patient characteristics, care processes and case fatality of first emergency admission for alcohol-related liver disease (ARLD) in England.
National population-based, retrospective observational cohort study.
Clinical Practice Research Datalink population of England, 2008/2009 to 2017/2018. First emergency admissions were identified using the Liverpool ARLD algorithm. We applied survival analyses and binary logistic regression to study prognostic trends.
Patient characteristics; 'recent' General Practitioner (GP) consultations and hospital admissions (preceding year); higher level care; deaths in-hospital (including certified cause) and within 365 days. Covariates were age, sex, deprivation status, coding pattern, ARLD stage, non-liver comorbidity, coding for ascites and varices.
17 575 first admissions (mean age: 53 years; 33% women; 32% from most deprived quintile). Almost half had codes suggesting advanced liver disease. In year before admission, only 47% of GP consulters had alcohol-related problems recorded; alcohol-specific diagnostic codes were absent in 24% of recent admission records. Overall, case fatality rate was 15% in-hospital and 34% at 1 year. Case-mix-adjusted odds of in-hospital death reduced by 6% per year (adjusted OR (aOR): 0.94; 95% CI: 0.93 to 0.96) and 4% per year at 365 days (aOR: 0.96; 95% CI: 0.95 to 0.97). Exploratory analyses suggested the possibility of regional inequalities in outcome.
Despite improving prognosis of first admissions, we found missed opportunities for earlier recognition and intervention in primary and secondary care. In 2017/2018, one in seven were still dying during index admission, rising to one-third within a year. Nationwide efforts are needed to promote earlier detection and intervention, and to minimise avoidable mortality after first emergency presentation. Regional variation requires further investigation.
研究英格兰首次因酒精性肝病(ALD)急诊入院患者特征、治疗过程和病死率的时间趋势。
全国性基于人群的回顾性观察队列研究。
英格兰临床实践研究数据链接人群,2008/2009 年至 2017/2018 年。使用利物浦 ALD 算法识别首次急诊入院。我们应用生存分析和二项逻辑回归研究预后趋势。
患者特征;“近期”全科医生(GP)就诊和住院(前一年);更高水平的治疗;住院期间(包括经证实的死因)和 365 天内死亡。协变量为年龄、性别、贫困程度、编码模式、ALD 分期、非肝脏合并症、腹水和静脉曲张编码。
共纳入 17575 例首次入院患者(平均年龄 53 岁;33%为女性;32%来自最贫困五分位数)。近一半的患者有提示晚期肝病的编码。在入院前一年,仅有 47%的 GP 就诊者有与酒精相关的问题记录;24%的近期入院记录中缺乏酒精特异性诊断编码。总体而言,住院病死率为 15%,1 年病死率为 34%。校正病例组合后,住院期间死亡的可能性每年降低 6%(校正比值比(aOR):0.94;95%CI:0.93 至 0.96),365 天内死亡的可能性每年降低 4%(aOR:0.96;95%CI:0.95 至 0.97)。探索性分析提示存在结局的区域不平等。
尽管首次入院患者的预后有所改善,但我们发现初级和二级保健中存在早期识别和干预的机会错失。2017/2018 年,每 7 例患者中就有 1 例在指数住院期间死亡,一年内死亡人数增至 1/3。需要在全国范围内努力促进早期发现和干预,并尽量减少首次急诊就诊后的可避免死亡。区域差异需要进一步调查。