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Articles

Alcoholic Hepatitis Superimposed on Cirrhosis. Clinical Significance and Effect of Long-term Prednisone Treatment

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Pages 305-312 | Received 16 Aug 1975, Accepted 08 Oct 1975, Published online: 16 Oct 2020
 

Abstract

Schlichting, P., Juhl, E., Poulsen, H., Winkel, P & the Copenhagen Study Group for Liver Diseases.* Alcoholic hepatitis superimposed on cirrhosis. Clinical significance and effect of long-term prednisone treatment. Scand. J. Gastroent. 1976, 11, 305-312.

Of 483 patients with biopsy-verified cirrhosis who entered the controlled trial of prednisone treatment conducted by the Copenhagen Study Group for Liver Diseases, 99 had alcoholic hepatitis as defined by morphological criteria in the initial biopsy. The maximum period of observation varied from 5 to 12 years. The survival of prednisone-treated patients (median survival time 38 months) and placebo-treated patients (median survival time 34 months) with alcoholic hepatitis did not differ significantly. This was also true for each of the two subgroups comprising mild and severe cases respectively. The presence of morphologically defined alcoholic hepatitis was positively correlated with the daily consumption of alcohol but poorly correlated with the clinical syndrome usually attributed to alcoholic hepatitis.

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