4.4 Article

Alcoholic Liver Disease Among Patients with Wernicke Encephalopathy: A Multicenter Observational Study

Journal

DRUG AND ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE
Volume 230, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2021.109186

Keywords

Wernicke encephalopathy; Alcoholic liver disease; Alcohol use disorders

Funding

  1. SEMI-Spanish Society of Internal Medicine (Working Group on Alcohol and Alcoholism)
  2. Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness
  3. Carlos III Health Institute (Networks for Cooperative Research in Health-RETICS) [RD16/0017/0023, RD16/0017/0003, RD RD16/0017/0018]
  4. European Fund for Regional Development

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The association between Wernicke encephalopathy (WE) and alcoholic liver disease (ALD) in patients with alcohol use disorders (AUDs) is frequent and potentially linked to differences in clinical presentation and poorer prognosis compared to alcoholic patients with WE without ALD.
Background: data regarding the association between Wernicke encephalopathy (WE) and alcoholic liver disease (ALD) are scarce in spite of alcohol consumption being the main risk factor for WE. Aims: to describe the frequency of ALD in a cohort of patients diagnosed with WE and alcohol use disorders (AUDs) and to compare the characteristics of WE patients with and without ALD. Methods: we conducted an observational study in 21 centers through a nationwide registry of the Spanish Society of Internal Medicine. WE Caine criteria were applied and demographic, clinical, and outcome variables were analyzed. Results: 434 patients were included in the study, of which 372 were men (85.7%), and the mean age was 55 +/- 11.8 years. ALD was present in 162 (37.3%) patients and we found a higher percentage of cases with tremor, flapping and hallucinations in the ALD group. A total of 22 patients (5.0%) died during admission (7.4% with ALD vs 3.7% without ALD; P = 0.087). Among the ALD patients, a relationship between mortality and the presence of anemia (Odds ratio [OR] =4.6 Confidence interval [CI]95% 1.1-18.8; P = 0.034), low level of consciousness (OR=4.9 CI95% 1.1-21.2; P = 0.031) and previous diagnosis of cancer (OR=10.3 CI95% 1.8-59.5; P = 0.009) was detected. Complete recovery was achieved by 27 patients with ALD (17.8%) and 71 (27.8%) without ALD (P = 0.030). Conclusion: the association of WE and ALD in patients with AUDs is frequent and potentially linked to differences in clinical presentation and to poorer prognosis, as compared to alcoholic patients with WE without ALD.

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