Alcohol use among patients with HIV infection

Objective. To evaluate alcohol use in patients with HIV infection, assess ethnic and social associations, and describe outcomes.Material and methods. Design: cohort study. Setting: Academic HIV-Liver Clinic. Patients: 431 HIV-infected patients (371 men, 60 women); 249 patients with HIV/HCV coinfecti...

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Main Author: Maurizio Bonacini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2011-10-01
Series:Annals of Hepatology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1665268119315194
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spelling doaj-742d18225c1b42fa8b003ef168d3f1102021-06-09T05:55:00ZengElsevierAnnals of Hepatology1665-26812011-10-01104502507Alcohol use among patients with HIV infectionMaurizio Bonacini0Department of Transplantation, California Pacific Medical Center, San Francisco CA, USA; Correspondence and reprint request:Objective. To evaluate alcohol use in patients with HIV infection, assess ethnic and social associations, and describe outcomes.Material and methods. Design: cohort study. Setting: Academic HIV-Liver Clinic. Patients: 431 HIV-infected patients (371 men, 60 women); 249 patients with HIV/HCV coinfection, 115 HIV alone, and 67 with HIV/HBV. Intervention: alcohol use was estimated at first interview and reported as the estimated average lifetime consumption in grams/day. Outcome measures: laboratory values, liver fibrosis, decompensation and mortality.Results. Twenty-two percent of patients in the entire cohort had high risk lifetime average alcohol consumption, defined as ≥ 50 mg/day. Fifty-six percent of patients had quit all alcohol when first evaluated, but follow-up showed that 26% continued high risk consumption. By univariate analysis high alcohol consumption was associated with Latino ethnicity, injection drug use (IDU) and hepatitis C (HCV) coinfection. Multivariable analysis showed only IDU to be independently associated with high alcohol consumption (RR = 4.1, p = 0.0005). There were no significant differences in laboratory values, including CD4 cell counts, except for a trend towards higher transaminases and liver fibrosis scores, between high and low alcohol users. All-cause mortality was statistically higher in the high (37%) vs. low (25%, p = 0.03) alcohol use group, and was associated with both IDU (RR = 2.2, p = 0.04) and the amount of alcohol consumed (RR = 1.1, p = 0.04). Liver decompensation and mortality were both higher in the high use group but of borderline significance. Using an ordinal grouping, we found a strong correlation (R = 0.88) between alcohol consumption and the percentage of liver death over total deaths, with lowest mortality rates found in those use of 10 g/day or less.Conclusions. Unsafe use of alcohol is prevalent in HIV-infected patients and stoppage is not universal. There is a significant impact on all-cause mortality and a trend towards higher liver morbidity and mortality. IDU is significantly and independently associated with high ethanol intake. Practitioners should strongly recommend that HIV patients minimize alcohol use.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1665268119315194HIV infectionEthanolDrug usersHepatitis C virusHepatitis B virusSeroprevalence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maurizio Bonacini
spellingShingle Maurizio Bonacini
Alcohol use among patients with HIV infection
Annals of Hepatology
HIV infection
Ethanol
Drug users
Hepatitis C virus
Hepatitis B virus
Seroprevalence
author_facet Maurizio Bonacini
author_sort Maurizio Bonacini
title Alcohol use among patients with HIV infection
title_short Alcohol use among patients with HIV infection
title_full Alcohol use among patients with HIV infection
title_fullStr Alcohol use among patients with HIV infection
title_full_unstemmed Alcohol use among patients with HIV infection
title_sort alcohol use among patients with hiv infection
publisher Elsevier
series Annals of Hepatology
issn 1665-2681
publishDate 2011-10-01
description Objective. To evaluate alcohol use in patients with HIV infection, assess ethnic and social associations, and describe outcomes.Material and methods. Design: cohort study. Setting: Academic HIV-Liver Clinic. Patients: 431 HIV-infected patients (371 men, 60 women); 249 patients with HIV/HCV coinfection, 115 HIV alone, and 67 with HIV/HBV. Intervention: alcohol use was estimated at first interview and reported as the estimated average lifetime consumption in grams/day. Outcome measures: laboratory values, liver fibrosis, decompensation and mortality.Results. Twenty-two percent of patients in the entire cohort had high risk lifetime average alcohol consumption, defined as ≥ 50 mg/day. Fifty-six percent of patients had quit all alcohol when first evaluated, but follow-up showed that 26% continued high risk consumption. By univariate analysis high alcohol consumption was associated with Latino ethnicity, injection drug use (IDU) and hepatitis C (HCV) coinfection. Multivariable analysis showed only IDU to be independently associated with high alcohol consumption (RR = 4.1, p = 0.0005). There were no significant differences in laboratory values, including CD4 cell counts, except for a trend towards higher transaminases and liver fibrosis scores, between high and low alcohol users. All-cause mortality was statistically higher in the high (37%) vs. low (25%, p = 0.03) alcohol use group, and was associated with both IDU (RR = 2.2, p = 0.04) and the amount of alcohol consumed (RR = 1.1, p = 0.04). Liver decompensation and mortality were both higher in the high use group but of borderline significance. Using an ordinal grouping, we found a strong correlation (R = 0.88) between alcohol consumption and the percentage of liver death over total deaths, with lowest mortality rates found in those use of 10 g/day or less.Conclusions. Unsafe use of alcohol is prevalent in HIV-infected patients and stoppage is not universal. There is a significant impact on all-cause mortality and a trend towards higher liver morbidity and mortality. IDU is significantly and independently associated with high ethanol intake. Practitioners should strongly recommend that HIV patients minimize alcohol use.
topic HIV infection
Ethanol
Drug users
Hepatitis C virus
Hepatitis B virus
Seroprevalence
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1665268119315194
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