TY - JOUR
T1 - VA Cooperative Study on Alcoholic Hepatitis IV. The Significance of Clinically Mild Alcoholic Hepatitis—Describing the Population with Minimal Hyperhilirubinemia
AU - Goldberg, S.
AU - Mendenhall, C.
AU - Anderson, S.
AU - Garcia‐Pont, P.
AU - Kiernan, Thomas W
AU - Seeff, L.
AU - Sorrell, M.
AU - Tamburro, C.
AU - Weesner, R.
AU - Zetterman, R.
AU - Chedid, A.
AU - Chen, T.
AU - Rabin, L.
PY - 1986/11
Y1 - 1986/11
N2 - As part of a large multicenter Veterans Administration Cooperative Study of Alcoholic Hepatitis, 89 patients with clinically mild biopsy‐proven disease were followed for at least 30 months. Although clinical and laboratory abnormalities were minimal, cirrhosis was present in 38%, and mortality was 22% at 30 months. Clinical features suggesting more advanced disease (i.e. ascites and encephalopathy) and laboratory parameters for the diagnosis of alcoholic hepatitis and/or cirrhosis were imprecise and frequently misleading. The histologic diagnosis of cirrhosis correlated best with changes in immunoglobulin A, prothrombin time, and SGOT/ SGPT. However, by using logistic discriminant analysis on 26 commonly available laboratory tests to diagnose cirrhosis, only a 72% sensitivity and 88% specificity could be obtained. Mortality in the patients with cirrhosis (10/34) was significantly higher at 1 and 2 yr compared with patients without cirrhosis (10/55, p< 0.01). The high mortality in noncirrhotics may have resulted from progression to cirrhosis subsequent to the initial evaluation. Thus, liver biopsy in this population with minimal disease seems necessary to establish both an accurate diagnosis and the reversibility of the disease.
AB - As part of a large multicenter Veterans Administration Cooperative Study of Alcoholic Hepatitis, 89 patients with clinically mild biopsy‐proven disease were followed for at least 30 months. Although clinical and laboratory abnormalities were minimal, cirrhosis was present in 38%, and mortality was 22% at 30 months. Clinical features suggesting more advanced disease (i.e. ascites and encephalopathy) and laboratory parameters for the diagnosis of alcoholic hepatitis and/or cirrhosis were imprecise and frequently misleading. The histologic diagnosis of cirrhosis correlated best with changes in immunoglobulin A, prothrombin time, and SGOT/ SGPT. However, by using logistic discriminant analysis on 26 commonly available laboratory tests to diagnose cirrhosis, only a 72% sensitivity and 88% specificity could be obtained. Mortality in the patients with cirrhosis (10/34) was significantly higher at 1 and 2 yr compared with patients without cirrhosis (10/55, p< 0.01). The high mortality in noncirrhotics may have resulted from progression to cirrhosis subsequent to the initial evaluation. Thus, liver biopsy in this population with minimal disease seems necessary to establish both an accurate diagnosis and the reversibility of the disease.
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U2 - 10.1111/j.1572-0241.1986.tb01383.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1572-0241.1986.tb01383.x
M3 - Article
C2 - 3776948
AN - SCOPUS:0022993993
SN - 0002-9270
VL - 81
SP - 1029
EP - 1034
JO - American Journal of Gastroenterology
JF - American Journal of Gastroenterology
IS - 11
ER -