Incidence and predictors of alcohol relapse following living donor liver transplantation for alcohol related liver disease

Author:

Falari Sanyam Santosh1,Mohapatra Nihar1ORCID,Patil Nilesh Sadashiv1,Pattnaik Bramhadatta1,Varshney Mohit2,Choudhury Ashok3,Sarin Shiv K.3,Pamecha Viniyendra1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Hepato‐Pancreato‐Biliary and Liver Transplant Surgery Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences New Delhi India

2. Department of Psychiatry Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences New Delhi India

3. Department of Hepatology Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences New Delhi India

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAlcohol relapse after liver transplantation has a negative impact on outcomes. There is limited data on its burden, the predictors, and impact following live donor liver transplantation (LDLT).MethodsA single‐center observational study was carried out between July 2011 and March 2021 for patients undergoing LDLT for alcohol associated liver disease (ALD). The incidence, predictors of alcohol relapse, and post‐transplant outcomes were assessed.ResultsAltogether 720 LDLT were performed during the study period, 203 (28.19%) for ALD. The overall relapse rate was 9.85% (n = 20) with a median follow‐up of 52 months (range, 12–140 months). Sustained harmful alcohol use was seen in 4 (1.97%). On multivariate analysis, pre‐LT relapse (P = .001), duration of abstinence period (P = .007), daily intake of alcohol (P = .001), absence of life partner (P = .021), concurrent tobacco abuse before transplant (P = .001), the donation from second‐degree relative (P = .003) and poor compliance with medications (P = .001) were identified as predictors for relapse. Alcohol relapse was associated with the risk of graft rejection (HR 4.54, 95% CI: 1.751–11.80, P = .002).ConclusionOur results show that the overall incidence of relapse and rate of harmful drinking following LDLT is low. Donation from spouse and first degree relative was protective. History of daily intake, prior relapse, shorter pretransplant abstinence duration and lack of family support significantly predicted relapse.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Hepatology,Surgery

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