4.7 Article

The clinical course of alcoholic cirrhosis: development of comorbid diseases. A Danish nationwide cohort study

Journal

LIVER INTERNATIONAL
Volume 36, Issue 11, Pages 1696-1703

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/liv.13151

Keywords

alcoholic cirrhosis; alcoholic liver disease; comorbidity; end-stage liver disease; prognosis

Funding

  1. Danish Council for Independent Research under the Danish Agency for Science, Technology and Innovation [10-081838/FSS]

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Background & AimsWe aimed to determine associations between alcoholic cirrhosis and incidence of comorbidity, and to describe the clinical course of alcoholic cirrhosis in terms of comorbidity development. The comorbid diseases we studied were acute myocardial infarction, heart failure, peripheral arterial disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, chronic kidney disease, epilepsy, diabetes and cancer. MethodsThis was a registry-based nationwide historical cohort study. We included 10650 Danish citizens diagnosed with alcoholic cirrhosis at age 45-69years in 1994-2014 and 43150 age- and gender-matched persons. None of them had the comorbid diseases we studied at inclusion. We compared rates and cumulative risks of comorbidity development between patients and controls. ResultsPatients with alcoholic cirrhosis had a higher rate of comorbidity (hazard ratio for any comorbidity=3.74, 95% CI 3.56-3.94), including all the non-cancer comorbidities (hazard ratio for any non-cancer comorbidity=4.33, 95% CI 4.06-4.62) except acute myocardial infarction. They also had a higher rate of developing cancer (hazard ratio=2.94, 95% CI 2.70-3.19). Still, relatively few patients actually lived to experience development of non-cancer (10-year risk: 21.4% vs. 13.2% for controls) or cancer comorbidity (10-year risk: 10.9% vs. 10.0%) because they died before they developed any comorbid disease. Hepatocellular carcinoma and oropharyngeal cancer were the only two comorbidities that were much more likely to develop in patients than in controls. ConclusionsAlcoholic cirrhosis promotes development of several comorbid diseases, but only few patients with alcoholic cirrhosis live long enough to actually develop them.

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