Infections increase the risk of decompensation and death in patients with early alcohol-related liver disease

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Infections increase the risk of decompensation and death in patients with early alcohol-related liver disease. / Johansen, Stine; Langkjær, Simon; Rasmussen, Ditlev Nytoft; Israelsen, Mads; Torp, Nikolaj; Lindvig, Katrine; Kjærgaard, Maria; Hansen, Johanne Kragh; Hansen, Camilla Dalby; Thorhauge, Katrine; Andersen, Peter; Detlefsen, Sönke; Juel, Helene Bæk; Justesen, Ulrik Stenz; Hansen, Torben; Krag, Aleksander; Thiele, Maja; GALAXY and MicrobLiver consortia; MicrobLiver Consortium.

In: JHEP Reports, Vol. 6, No. 4, 101016, 2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Johansen, S, Langkjær, S, Rasmussen, DN, Israelsen, M, Torp, N, Lindvig, K, Kjærgaard, M, Hansen, JK, Hansen, CD, Thorhauge, K, Andersen, P, Detlefsen, S, Juel, HB, Justesen, US, Hansen, T, Krag, A, Thiele, M, GALAXY and MicrobLiver consortia & MicrobLiver Consortium 2024, 'Infections increase the risk of decompensation and death in patients with early alcohol-related liver disease', JHEP Reports, vol. 6, no. 4, 101016. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhepr.2024.101016

APA

Johansen, S., Langkjær, S., Rasmussen, D. N., Israelsen, M., Torp, N., Lindvig, K., Kjærgaard, M., Hansen, J. K., Hansen, C. D., Thorhauge, K., Andersen, P., Detlefsen, S., Juel, H. B., Justesen, U. S., Hansen, T., Krag, A., Thiele, M., GALAXY and MicrobLiver consortia, & MicrobLiver Consortium (2024). Infections increase the risk of decompensation and death in patients with early alcohol-related liver disease. JHEP Reports, 6(4), [101016]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhepr.2024.101016

Vancouver

Johansen S, Langkjær S, Rasmussen DN, Israelsen M, Torp N, Lindvig K et al. Infections increase the risk of decompensation and death in patients with early alcohol-related liver disease. JHEP Reports. 2024;6(4). 101016. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhepr.2024.101016

Author

Johansen, Stine ; Langkjær, Simon ; Rasmussen, Ditlev Nytoft ; Israelsen, Mads ; Torp, Nikolaj ; Lindvig, Katrine ; Kjærgaard, Maria ; Hansen, Johanne Kragh ; Hansen, Camilla Dalby ; Thorhauge, Katrine ; Andersen, Peter ; Detlefsen, Sönke ; Juel, Helene Bæk ; Justesen, Ulrik Stenz ; Hansen, Torben ; Krag, Aleksander ; Thiele, Maja ; GALAXY and MicrobLiver consortia ; MicrobLiver Consortium. / Infections increase the risk of decompensation and death in patients with early alcohol-related liver disease. In: JHEP Reports. 2024 ; Vol. 6, No. 4.

Bibtex

@article{3236e59b3c5a42ee920b6bdd7031737c,
title = "Infections increase the risk of decompensation and death in patients with early alcohol-related liver disease",
abstract = "Background & Aims: Infections are frequent in patients with cirrhosis and worsen prognosis. We evaluated the incidence of infections and their impact on decompensation and death in patients with early alcohol-related liver disease (ALD) during long-term follow-up. Methods: We performed a prospective cohort study of patients in secondary care with a history of excess alcohol intake, no prior decompensation, and with liver biopsies along with clinical investigations conducted at baseline. During follow-up, we reviewed the patients{\textquoteright} electronic healthcare records for cases of infections, hospitalizations, transient elastography measurements, decompensations, all-cause mortality, and alcohol intake. Results: We included 461 patients with a mean age of 56±10 years (76% males; fibrosis stage F0-1/F2/F3-4 = 259/107/93 [56%/23%/20%]). During a median follow-up of 4.5 years (IQR 2.9-6.3), 134 patients (29%) developed a total of 312 infections, most frequently pneumonia (106/312, 34%) and urinary tract infections (57/312, 18%). Excessive alcohol intake during follow-up, smoking ≥30 pack years, MELD score and elevated liver stiffness during follow-up were independent predictors of infections. Patients who developed at least one infection had a significantly increased risk of subsequent decompensation (hazard ratio 4.98, 95% CI 2.47-10.03) and death (hazard ratio 8.24, 95% CI 4.65-14.59). Infections increased the risk of decompensation and death independently of baseline fibrosis stage, age, gender, and MELD score. Conclusions: Almost one-third of patients with early ALD develop an infection, which worsens their prognosis by increasing the risk of decompensation and death. The risk of infections increases with liver disease severity and ongoing harmful use of alcohol. Impact and implications: This study reveals that infections significantly worsen the prognosis of patients with early alcohol-related liver disease (ALD), increasing the likelihood of decompensation and death by up to eight times. These findings, pertinent to healthcare providers, researchers, and policymakers, emphasize the importance of early prevention and management of infections in patients with ALD, even those in early stages who may be asymptomatic. It was observed that nearly one-third of patients with early-stage ALD developed infections over 4.5 years, with risk factors including alcohol overuse, smoking, and higher MELD scores. The research underscores the critical need to incorporate these insights into clinical practice and public health policies to improve patient outcomes and mitigate the impact of infections in patients with ALD.",
keywords = "Alcoholic liver disease, Cirrhosis, Decompensation, Fibrosis, Prognosis",
author = "Stine Johansen and Simon Langkj{\ae}r and Rasmussen, {Ditlev Nytoft} and Mads Israelsen and Nikolaj Torp and Katrine Lindvig and Maria Kj{\ae}rgaard and Hansen, {Johanne Kragh} and Hansen, {Camilla Dalby} and Katrine Thorhauge and Peter Andersen and S{\"o}nke Detlefsen and Juel, {Helene B{\ae}k} and Justesen, {Ulrik Stenz} and Torben Hansen and Aleksander Krag and Maja Thiele and {GALAXY and MicrobLiver consortia} and {MicrobLiver Consortium}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2024 The Author(s)",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1016/j.jhepr.2024.101016",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
journal = "JHEP Reports",
issn = "2589-5559",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Infections increase the risk of decompensation and death in patients with early alcohol-related liver disease

AU - Johansen, Stine

AU - Langkjær, Simon

AU - Rasmussen, Ditlev Nytoft

AU - Israelsen, Mads

AU - Torp, Nikolaj

AU - Lindvig, Katrine

AU - Kjærgaard, Maria

AU - Hansen, Johanne Kragh

AU - Hansen, Camilla Dalby

AU - Thorhauge, Katrine

AU - Andersen, Peter

AU - Detlefsen, Sönke

AU - Juel, Helene Bæk

AU - Justesen, Ulrik Stenz

AU - Hansen, Torben

AU - Krag, Aleksander

AU - Thiele, Maja

AU - GALAXY and MicrobLiver consortia

AU - MicrobLiver Consortium

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Author(s)

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Background & Aims: Infections are frequent in patients with cirrhosis and worsen prognosis. We evaluated the incidence of infections and their impact on decompensation and death in patients with early alcohol-related liver disease (ALD) during long-term follow-up. Methods: We performed a prospective cohort study of patients in secondary care with a history of excess alcohol intake, no prior decompensation, and with liver biopsies along with clinical investigations conducted at baseline. During follow-up, we reviewed the patients’ electronic healthcare records for cases of infections, hospitalizations, transient elastography measurements, decompensations, all-cause mortality, and alcohol intake. Results: We included 461 patients with a mean age of 56±10 years (76% males; fibrosis stage F0-1/F2/F3-4 = 259/107/93 [56%/23%/20%]). During a median follow-up of 4.5 years (IQR 2.9-6.3), 134 patients (29%) developed a total of 312 infections, most frequently pneumonia (106/312, 34%) and urinary tract infections (57/312, 18%). Excessive alcohol intake during follow-up, smoking ≥30 pack years, MELD score and elevated liver stiffness during follow-up were independent predictors of infections. Patients who developed at least one infection had a significantly increased risk of subsequent decompensation (hazard ratio 4.98, 95% CI 2.47-10.03) and death (hazard ratio 8.24, 95% CI 4.65-14.59). Infections increased the risk of decompensation and death independently of baseline fibrosis stage, age, gender, and MELD score. Conclusions: Almost one-third of patients with early ALD develop an infection, which worsens their prognosis by increasing the risk of decompensation and death. The risk of infections increases with liver disease severity and ongoing harmful use of alcohol. Impact and implications: This study reveals that infections significantly worsen the prognosis of patients with early alcohol-related liver disease (ALD), increasing the likelihood of decompensation and death by up to eight times. These findings, pertinent to healthcare providers, researchers, and policymakers, emphasize the importance of early prevention and management of infections in patients with ALD, even those in early stages who may be asymptomatic. It was observed that nearly one-third of patients with early-stage ALD developed infections over 4.5 years, with risk factors including alcohol overuse, smoking, and higher MELD scores. The research underscores the critical need to incorporate these insights into clinical practice and public health policies to improve patient outcomes and mitigate the impact of infections in patients with ALD.

AB - Background & Aims: Infections are frequent in patients with cirrhosis and worsen prognosis. We evaluated the incidence of infections and their impact on decompensation and death in patients with early alcohol-related liver disease (ALD) during long-term follow-up. Methods: We performed a prospective cohort study of patients in secondary care with a history of excess alcohol intake, no prior decompensation, and with liver biopsies along with clinical investigations conducted at baseline. During follow-up, we reviewed the patients’ electronic healthcare records for cases of infections, hospitalizations, transient elastography measurements, decompensations, all-cause mortality, and alcohol intake. Results: We included 461 patients with a mean age of 56±10 years (76% males; fibrosis stage F0-1/F2/F3-4 = 259/107/93 [56%/23%/20%]). During a median follow-up of 4.5 years (IQR 2.9-6.3), 134 patients (29%) developed a total of 312 infections, most frequently pneumonia (106/312, 34%) and urinary tract infections (57/312, 18%). Excessive alcohol intake during follow-up, smoking ≥30 pack years, MELD score and elevated liver stiffness during follow-up were independent predictors of infections. Patients who developed at least one infection had a significantly increased risk of subsequent decompensation (hazard ratio 4.98, 95% CI 2.47-10.03) and death (hazard ratio 8.24, 95% CI 4.65-14.59). Infections increased the risk of decompensation and death independently of baseline fibrosis stage, age, gender, and MELD score. Conclusions: Almost one-third of patients with early ALD develop an infection, which worsens their prognosis by increasing the risk of decompensation and death. The risk of infections increases with liver disease severity and ongoing harmful use of alcohol. Impact and implications: This study reveals that infections significantly worsen the prognosis of patients with early alcohol-related liver disease (ALD), increasing the likelihood of decompensation and death by up to eight times. These findings, pertinent to healthcare providers, researchers, and policymakers, emphasize the importance of early prevention and management of infections in patients with ALD, even those in early stages who may be asymptomatic. It was observed that nearly one-third of patients with early-stage ALD developed infections over 4.5 years, with risk factors including alcohol overuse, smoking, and higher MELD scores. The research underscores the critical need to incorporate these insights into clinical practice and public health policies to improve patient outcomes and mitigate the impact of infections in patients with ALD.

KW - Alcoholic liver disease

KW - Cirrhosis

KW - Decompensation

KW - Fibrosis

KW - Prognosis

U2 - 10.1016/j.jhepr.2024.101016

DO - 10.1016/j.jhepr.2024.101016

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 38486819

AN - SCOPUS:85187001473

VL - 6

JO - JHEP Reports

JF - JHEP Reports

SN - 2589-5559

IS - 4

M1 - 101016

ER -

ID: 385589387