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Mortality risk in alcoholic patients in northern Italy: comorbidity and treatment retention effects in a 30-Year follow-up study

Mortality risk in alcoholic patients in northern Italy: comorbidity and treatment retention effects in a 30-Year follow-up study
Mortality risk in alcoholic patients in northern Italy: comorbidity and treatment retention effects in a 30-Year follow-up study
Aims: to analyse the general and cause-specific mortality over the course of 30 years among subjects treated for alcohol use disorders (AUD) in Northern Italy.

Methods: cohort of 2499 subjects followed-up for mortality until 31 December 2012. Standardized mortality ratios (SMRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) were computed to compare the mortality in the cohort with the general population. Cox regression was used to study the effect of psychiatric disorders, burden of physical comorbidity and retention in treatment on mortality, controlling for socio-demographic factors.

Results: during the follow-up, 435 deaths occurred. Compared with the general population, alcoholics experienced a 5-fold increased mortality (SMR: 5.53; 95% CI: 5.03, 6.07). Significant excess mortality was observed for a range of specific causes: infections, cancers, cardiovascular, respiratory and digestive system diseases as well as violent causes. In multivariate analysis, the hazard of dying was lower for female gender (hazard ratio [HR]: 0.62; 95% CI: 0.46, 0.84) and for increasing length of retention in treatment (HR for third tertile vs first tertile: 0.43; 95% CI: 0.32, 0.57). Burden of physical comorbidity was associated with increased hazard of dying (HR for 3+ comorbidities vs no comorbidities: 4.40; 95% CI: 2.91, 6.66). Psychiatric comorbidity was not associated with mortality.

Conclusions: despite the harmful effect of AUD, retention in treatment represented a protective factor against death, suggesting that strategies supporting primary medical- and social-care may effectively reduce premature mortality
0735-0414
Morandi, Gianni
dee82abc-19ae-4dbe-b966-608fdf04c455
Periche Tomas, Eva
d3a55610-f678-485e-8601-2356aa9af5ed
Pirani, Monica
655b535b-5117-4a63-84e7-0588fbe0acc1
Morandi, Gianni
dee82abc-19ae-4dbe-b966-608fdf04c455
Periche Tomas, Eva
d3a55610-f678-485e-8601-2356aa9af5ed
Pirani, Monica
655b535b-5117-4a63-84e7-0588fbe0acc1

Morandi, Gianni, Periche Tomas, Eva and Pirani, Monica (2015) Mortality risk in alcoholic patients in northern Italy: comorbidity and treatment retention effects in a 30-Year follow-up study. Alcohol and Alcoholism. (doi:10.1093/alcalc/agv058). (PMID:26041606)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Aims: to analyse the general and cause-specific mortality over the course of 30 years among subjects treated for alcohol use disorders (AUD) in Northern Italy.

Methods: cohort of 2499 subjects followed-up for mortality until 31 December 2012. Standardized mortality ratios (SMRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) were computed to compare the mortality in the cohort with the general population. Cox regression was used to study the effect of psychiatric disorders, burden of physical comorbidity and retention in treatment on mortality, controlling for socio-demographic factors.

Results: during the follow-up, 435 deaths occurred. Compared with the general population, alcoholics experienced a 5-fold increased mortality (SMR: 5.53; 95% CI: 5.03, 6.07). Significant excess mortality was observed for a range of specific causes: infections, cancers, cardiovascular, respiratory and digestive system diseases as well as violent causes. In multivariate analysis, the hazard of dying was lower for female gender (hazard ratio [HR]: 0.62; 95% CI: 0.46, 0.84) and for increasing length of retention in treatment (HR for third tertile vs first tertile: 0.43; 95% CI: 0.32, 0.57). Burden of physical comorbidity was associated with increased hazard of dying (HR for 3+ comorbidities vs no comorbidities: 4.40; 95% CI: 2.91, 6.66). Psychiatric comorbidity was not associated with mortality.

Conclusions: despite the harmful effect of AUD, retention in treatment represented a protective factor against death, suggesting that strategies supporting primary medical- and social-care may effectively reduce premature mortality

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More information

Published date: 3 June 2015
Organisations: Statistical Sciences Research Institute

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 378202
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/378202
ISSN: 0735-0414
PURE UUID: 8b6faad3-b73a-48e6-bbf3-05519d3073c6

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Date deposited: 25 Jun 2015 13:12
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 20:18

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Contributors

Author: Gianni Morandi
Author: Eva Periche Tomas
Author: Monica Pirani

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