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Two-pronged approach needed in alcohol-associated hepatitis

FROM THE JOURNAL OF CLINICAL GASTROENTEROLOGY

Multidisciplinary management for optimal outcomes

In a comment, Nancy S. Reau, MD, chair of hepatology, Rush Medical College, Chicago, agreed with the need to address both the risk for hepatic decompensation and AUD, the benefits of multidisciplinary management of patients, and the importance of patient engagement to successful outcomes.

“As hepatologists, we are often best at managing liver disease, but if you don’t also address the alcohol use disorder, the patient will not have the optimal outcome,” she said in an interview. “Most patients with severe AH have cirrhosis, [which] makes longitudinal follow-up imperative.”

“They are at risk for liver complications but also need aggressive nutritional support and management of their addiction,” she said. “As they improve, they can usually continue intensive treatment.”

Akhil Anand, MD, an addiction psychiatrist and co-director of the Multidisciplinary Alcohol Program at the Cleveland Clinic, also noted the increase in cases of alcohol-associated hepatitis from rising alcohol use.

The review “provides a timely, comprehensive, and impartial overview” of how to manage the condition, he said, as well as “how to treat co-occurring alcohol use disorder in this life-threatening situation.”

No funding was declared. The authors report no relevant financial relationships.

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