AI Article Synopsis

  • Liver transplant programs in Canada require patients with alcohol-related liver disease to abstain from alcohol for 6 months, but there is debate about whether this requirement should be strictly enforced.
  • A multicenter survey in British Columbia found that 83.1% of respondents agreed with the 6-month abstinence rule, though opinions varied about early transplantation for patients unlikely to survive that long.
  • While many respondents would maintain the abstinence criteria, some showed a willingness to relax it for select cases, suggesting a complex public perception that could benefit from broader nationwide studies.

Article Abstract

Liver transplant programs in Canada require a period of 6 months of abstinence from alcohol before considering a patient with liver disease secondary to alcohol for transplantation. Although some studies have demonstrated good outcomes following a transplant in carefully selected patients before the 6-month abstinence period has been met, there have been arguments against this, including the claim that the public has a general negative perception of those with alcohol dependence. We performed a multicenter cross-sectional survey to determine the perception of people in British Columbia, Canada, toward liver transplantation in patients with liver disease due to alcohol who have not demonstrated the capacity to remain abstinent from alcohol for 6 months. A total of 304 patient questionnaires were completed, and 83.1% agreed with a period of abstinence of 6 months. In those patients who were unlikely to survive 6 months without a transplant, 34.1% of respondents agreed with, 44.1% did not agree with, and 21.4% were neutral about, early transplantation; 42.8% would have less trust in the process of transplantation if a period of abstinence was not maintained, but relaxing the requirement for an abstinence period would not have an impact on the majority's decision to donate organs. Only 30.5% would support abandoning the abstinence criteria. Among patients followed at general gastroenterology, medicine, or transplant clinics, there is a willingness to relax the criteria in selected patients unlikely to survive without a transplant, although a general consensus remains in support of the existing 6-month alcohol abstinence rule. A larger scale survey of all provinces in Canada would be required to assess support for such a change in policy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6671774PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hep4.1390DOI Listing

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