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Classical blood biomarkers identify patients with higher risk for relapse 6 months after alcohol withdrawal treatment

Florian J. Raabe, Elias Wagner, Judith Weiser, Sarah Brechtel, David Popovic, Kristina Adorjan, Oliver Pogarell, Eva Hoch, Gabriele Koller

2020European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This naturalistic study among patients with alcohol dependence examined whether routine blood biomarkers could help to identify patients with high risk for relapse after withdrawal treatment. In a longitudinal study with 6-month follow-up among 133 patients with alcohol dependence who received inpatient alcohol withdrawal treatment, we investigated the usefulness of routine blood biomarkers and clinical and sociodemographic factors for potential outcome prediction and risk stratification. Baseline routine blood biomarkers (gamma-glutamyl transferase [GGT], alanine aminotransferase [ALT/GPT], aspartate aminotransferase [AST/GOT], mean cell volume of erythrocytes [MCV]), and clinical and sociodemographic characteristics were recorded at admission. Standardized 6 months' follow-up assessed outcome variables continuous abstinence, days of continuous abstinence, daily alcohol consumption and current abstinence. The combined threshold criterion of an AST:ALT ratio > 1.00 and MCV > 90.0 fl helped to identify high-risk patients. They had lower abstinence rates (P = 0.001), higher rates of daily alcohol consumption (P < 0.001) and shorter periods of continuous abstinence (P = 0.027) compared with low-risk patients who did not meet the threshold criterion. Regression analysis confirmed our hypothesis that the combination criterion is an individual baseline variable that significantly predicted parts of the respective outcome variances. Routinely assessed indirect alcohol biomarkers help to identify patients with high risk for relapse after alcohol withdrawal treatment. Clinical decision algorithms to identify patients with high risk for relapse after alcohol withdrawal treatment could include classical blood biomarkers in addition to clinical and sociodemographic items.

Topics & Concepts

AbstinenceMedicineInternal medicineAlcohol dependenceAlcoholAlcohol consumptionAlcohol withdrawal syndromePsychiatryChemistryBiochemistryAlcoholism and Thiamine DeficiencyAlcohol Consumption and Health EffectsSubstance Abuse Treatment and Outcomes
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