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Journal Article

Citation

Kabashi S, Vindenes V, Bryun EA, Koshkina EA, Nadezhdin AV, Tetenova EJ, Kolgashkin AJ, Petukhov AE, Perekhodov SN, Davydova EN, Gamboa D, Hilberg T, Lerdal A, Nordby G, Zhang C, Bogstrand ST. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2019; 204: e107588.

Affiliation

Department of Forensic Sciences, Oslo University Hospital, Nydalen, Oslo, Norway; Institute of Health and Society, Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway. Electronic address: stig.tore.bogstrand@ous-hf.no.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2019.107588

PMID

31590131

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The aim was to estimate the prevalence of harmful alcohol use in relation to socio-demographic characteristics among acutely ill medical patients, and examine identification measures of alcohol use, including the alcohol biomarker phosphatidylethanol 16:0/18:1 (PEth).

METHODS: A cross-sectional study, lasting one year at one hospital in Oslo, Norway and one in Moscow, Russia recruiting acute medically ill patients (≥ 18 years), able to give informed consent. Self-reported data on socio-demographics, mental distress (Symptom Check List-5), alcohol use (Alcohol Use Disorder Identification Test-4 (AUDIT-4) and alcohol consumption past 24 h were collected. PEth and alcohol concentration were measured in whole blood.

RESULTS: Of 5883 participating patients, 19.2% in Moscow and 21.1% in Oslo were harmful alcohol users, measured by AUDIT-4, while the prevalence of PEth-positive patients was lower: 11.4% in Oslo, 14.3% in Moscow. Men in Moscow were more likely to be harmful users by AUDIT-4 and PEth compared to men in Oslo, except of those being ≥ 71 years. Women in Oslo were more likely to be harmful users compared to those in Moscow by AUDIT-4, but not by PEth for those aged < 61 years.

CONCLUSIONS: The prevalence of harmful alcohol use was high at both study sites. The prevalence of harmful alcohol use was lower when assessed by PEth compared to AUDIT-4. Thus, self-reporting was the most sensitive measure in revealing harmful alcohol use among all groups except for women in Moscow. Hence, screening and identification with objective biomarkers and self-reporting might be a method for early intervention.

Copyright © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

AUDIT-4; Acute medically ill patients; Alcohol identification measures/tools; Blood alcohol biomarker phosphatidylethanol; Harmful alcohol use; Norway; Russia

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