%0 Journal Article %A Hansen, Emil Deleuran %A Torp, Nikolaj %A Johansen, Stine %A Hansen, Johanne Kragh %A Bergmann, Marianne Lerbaek %A Hansen, Camilla Dalby %A Detlefsen, Sonke %A Andersen, Peter %A Villesen, Ida %A Bech, Katrine %A Thorhauge, Katrine %A Jensen, Gitte Hedegaard %A Lindvig, Katrine Prier %A Hansen, Torben %A Tsochatzis, Emmanuel A %A Trebicka, Jonel %A Thiele, Maja %A Krag, Aleksander %A Israelsen, Mads %D 2025 %F discovery:10204498 %I ELSEVIER %J JHEP Reports %N 1 %T Quantification of alcohol intake in patients with steatotic liver disease and excessive alcohol intake %U https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10204498/ %V 7 %X Background & Aims: Quantifying alcohol intake is crucial for subclassifying participants with steatotic liver disease (SLD) and interpreting clinical trials of alcohol-related liver disease (ALD) and metabolic and alcohol-related liver disease (MetALD). However, the accuracy of self-reported alcohol intake is considered imprecise. We compared the diagnostic and prognostic utility of self-reported alcohol intake with blood-based biomarkers of alcohol intake: phosphatidylethanol (PEth) and carbohydrate-deficient transferrin (CDT). Methods: We studied 192 participants from two randomized controlled trials on MetALD and ALD, all with current or former excessive alcohol intake (≥24/36 [♀/♂] grams daily for at least 1 year) and biopsy-proven liver disease. We assessed self-reported alcohol intake, PEth, and CDT at four time points. We collected follow-up data on hepatic decompensation and death manually through electronic medical records. Results: Most participants were male (n = 161, 84%) with a mean age of 59 (SD 9) years and 73 participants reported 1-week abstinence before inclusion; the remaining reported a median alcohol intake of 43 g/day. Median PEth was 0.5 μmol/L (IQR: 0.0–1.3) and %CDT = 1.9 (IQR: 1.6–2.3). Of 32 patients reporting at least 6 months of abstinence; 27 (84%) was confirmed by PEth <0.05 μmol/L. Self-reported alcohol intake correlated well with PEth (r = 0.617) and moderately with CDT (r = 0.316). Self-reported alcohol intake, PEth, and CDT all predicted hepatic decompensation and death. However, PEth showed the highest prediction, surpassing self-reported alcohol intake (Harrel's C, PEth = 0.80 vs. self-reported = 0.68, p = 0.026). Conclusions: Self-reported abstinence can be considered reliable in clinical trials. However, PEth is superior in predicting hepatic decompensation and death in patients with MetALD and ALD. Impact and implications: An accurate quantification of alcohol intake is crucial in the clinical phenotyping of patients with steatotic liver disease and when designing clinical trials. This study found self-reported abstinence to be reliable but phosphatidylethanol was a more accurate prognostic biomarker of hepatic decompensation and death in a clinical trial setting. Findings may inform the design of future trials in patients with steatotic liver disease. %Z © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) under a Creative Commons license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).