From the Journals

Alcohol-related cirrhosis associated with higher risk of fractures, death


 

FROM CLINICAL GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY

Promoting bone health

Osteoporosis was the most common presumed mechanism in both patients with alcohol-related cirrhosis (49.4%) and controls (52.2%), while high-energy trauma from motor vehicle crashes or heights preceded 10.9% of fractures in patients and 13.5% in controls.

The Karolinska Institute study found that patients with alcohol-related cirrhosis had a 4.4-times higher rate of osteoporotic fracture than controls, which remained 3.6-times higher when using a stricter definition of osteoporotic fracture (a diagnosis of osteoporosis before, at, or within 3 months from the date of a fracture of the vertebrae, pelvis, proximal humerus, distal forearm, or hip).

Patients with osteoporosis at baseline had a 2.5-times higher incidence of fractures than controls with baseline osteoporosis. The absolute risk of fractures in patients with alcohol-related cirrhosis and osteoporosis was higher than for controls with osteoporosis during the first 3 years after a cirrhosis diagnosis.

In addition, the post-fracture mortality rate in those with osteoporosis was more than double in patients with cirrhosis in the first 30 days after a fracture and more than tripled after one year.

“Bone health isn’t necessarily prioritized for our patients, even though it is linked to higher mortality and disability,” Arpan Patel, MD, PhD, a hepatologist at the West Los Angeles VA Medical Center and assistant professor at the David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles, told this news organization.

Dr. Patel, who wasn’t involved with this study, has researched the associations between osteoporotic fracture risk, hospitalization, and death in patients with cirrhosis.

“Current guidelines support assessing post-liver transplant patients for bone density but do not currently advocate for doing so in patients with cirrhosis or alcohol-associated liver disease, who are a much larger at-risk population,” Dr. Patel said.

“The current paper supports the idea that we should consider the broad ramifications of alcohol use on bone health for our patients and suggests that there should be greater efforts to screen for and manage osteoporosis and osteopenia in our patients earlier,” he added.

The researchers were supported by grants from Region Stockholm and the Syskonen Svensson Foundation, though the funders had no role in the conduct of the study. The study authors reported no other disclosures or conflicts of interest. Dr. Tapper and Dr. Patel report no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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