Alcohol‐Related Liver Disease in Latin America: Local Solutions for a Global Problem
Luis Antonio Díaz, Juan Pablo Roblero, Ramón Bataller, Juan Pablo Arab
Abstract
Watch a video presentation of this article Watch an interview with the author Alcohol-related liver disease (ALD) represents a major public health problem worldwide.1 The region of The Americas has the second most deaths and disability-adjusted life-years attributable to alcohol consumption (5.5% and 6.7%, respectively) when compared with other regions (ranking led by the European region).2 Latin America has high alcohol per capita consumption, and individuals older than 15 years drink 6.8 L of pure alcohol per year over the global average consumption (6.4 L per capita).2 Excessive alcohol intake is a significant risk factor for injuries, risky sexual behavior, infections, cardiovascular disease, cancer, and liver disease.1 Approximately 35% of patients with alcohol use disorder (AUD) will develop some degree of chronic liver disease (steatohepatitis, fibrosis, cirrhosis, and/or hepatocellular carcinoma).3 In addition, patients with underlying ALD and high alcohol consumption can experience development of alcohol-related hepatitis, which is a life-threatening condition associated with a high short-term mortality rate.4 Even though alcohol is the leading cause of cirrhosis worldwide, it represents only the second indication for transplant in some Latin American countries (nonalcoholic steatohepatitis being the leading indication). This discrepancy may reflect some combination of psychosocial rules around transplantation, bias against alcohol use, poor social support, psychiatric comorbidities, and lesser likelihood of having access to health care. Despite its huge burden, ALD receives only 5% of the overall liver attention by the medical and scientific community.5 A recent study demonstrated that even low doses of alcohol intake (<10 g of pure alcohol per week), historically considered as protective, increase all-cause mortality.1 Hence public health policies to reduce alcohol consumption may have a high impact on decreasing the burden of disease. Alcohol consumption represents a major health problem for Latin America. Countries with the most per capita consumption are Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Dominican Republic, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, and Uruguay.2 Furthermore, it is not easy to estimate alcohol consumption because of underreporting, especially in areas with high homemade alcohol production. Due to the critical sociodemographic differences between Latin American countries, there is an essential difference in the types of drink consumed (beer, wine, or spirits) and in access to alcohol (such as in the alcohol-producing regions). Overall, alcohol consumption represents more than 50% of the attributable fraction of cirrhosis in Latin America.6 We must consider several factors for the high burden of ALD in Latin America. The first factor is the high number of current drinkers aged between 15 and 19 years old (29.9%) in Latin America, which results in prolonged and harmful exposure to alcohol throughout life.1, 7 Another important factor present is the high prevalence of alcohol consumption in women (41.9% in women ≥15 years old). Women have increased susceptibility to development of ALD, even with lower alcohol consumption, despite a similar duration in years of alcohol intake.8 Genetic predisposition also plays a role in the susceptibility of some ethnic areas of Latin America. One of the most recognized is the Patatin-like phospholipase domain protein 3 (PNPLA3) I148M G/G polymorphism, which is significantly more frequent in individuals with Native American ancestry and is a risk factor for the development of ALD.9 Therefore, there are new high-risk groups in Latin America, such as youth, women, inhabitants of alcohol-producing areas, areas with high homemade alcohol production, among others. Thus, it is vital to identify these groups to prioritize the development of public health policies that primarily address these populations. Several inequities identified in Latin America enhance the impact of alcohol, especially those regarding living conditions and timely access to the health care system. An important consequence of inequities is the “alcohol harm paradox” in which lower socioeconomic status is associated with higher mortality rate of alcohol-attributable causes despite lower socioeconomic groups often reporting lower levels of consumption. It was first described in the United Kingdom, but Latin America also faces the same paradox (Table 1).10 This paradox could reflect several problems that affect our region, including inequities in access to health systems, high rate of homemade alcohol production, and the potential susceptibility of some ethnicities. Alcohol consumption significantly affects Latin American countries, where only one-third of countries have seven or more alcohol public policies (Fig. 1), indicating that there is an urgent need to increase the number of public policies related to alcohol. The World Health Organization (WHO) categorizes the existing policies into eight categories, which include alcohol pricing, restrictions to alcohol access and consumption, control over alcohol advertising and promotion, among others. Ventura-Cots et al.11 recently summarized alcohol public health policies observing that taxation and price regulation are the most effective policies to reduce alcohol-related mortality. We propose that the problem of alcohol must be handled in a multimodal dimension. This approach includes the promotion of public policies, early detection of high consumption in at-risk populations, the appropriate diagnosis of AUD, and the improvement of the health care system at a global level (preventive, liver diseases management, management of comorbid diseases that increase risk for liver diseases, treatment of mental disorders, among others). It is critical to identify the main factors related to alcohol consumption in each country. We must promote the development of public health policies to decrease alcohol consumption based on the eight categories proposed by the WHO, with emphasis on the predominant problems identified for each country. For example, in a country with high consumption in the adolescent population, it would be vital to develop public policies focused on drinking age and youth focus policies, taxes control and pricing policies, and establishment of restrictions to alcohol access. Notably, alcohol consumption patterns can be strongly inherited and modulated by living in another country. For example, among Latin Americans living in the United States, 52% are current drinkers and 9% meet AUD criteria, which is higher than the Latin American prevalence rate (43.7% and 4.9%, respectively). The influence of acculturation to US mainstream society on alcohol use patterns appears to vary by background (heritage), generational status, and gender.12 This underlines the importance of tailoring research and intervention programs to examine the impact of alcohol public policies for different countries. The development of these policies must be only the beginning of improvement in all the categories of alcohol public policies. Hence we emphasize the need for development of other public policies and promote other measures in multimodal dimension. In conclusion, alcohol consumption has a high impact on the Latin American population, especially in low- and lower-middle-income countries. The lack of public policies and a national plan to face alcohol-related problems exacerbates the burden of ALD. It is critical to promote alcohol public policies with emphasis on the predominant problem for each country and develop measures to improve in a multimodal dimension.