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UnknownNCT04876443

Impact of COVID-19 Outbreak on the Alcohol Consumption in Patients With Alcohol-related Liver Disease (ICoLD)

Impact of COVID-19 Outbreak on the Alcohol Consumption in Patients With Alcohol-related Liver Disease

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
200 (estimated)
Sponsor
King's College Hospital NHS Trust · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers

Summary

The lockdown consequent to Coronavirus outbreak has had a differential impact on the drinking behaviour on the general population. The impact is unknown on the people with underlying chronic liver disease related to alcohol as some of them may have complex psychosocial background. The alcohol consumption in people with Alcohol-related Liver Disease (ArLD) is either due to alcohol dependence or related to their lifestyle. Alcohol dependence is a chronic relapsing remitting condition and this is associated with 60% mortality at 5 years in people who continue drinking. Recovery from alcohol-use disorder (AUD) has been made more difficult during lock-down because peer support meetings such as Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) have no longer been taking place; a majority of the residential rehabilitation centres have closed or are no longer accepting admissions (PHE, 2020) and the single detoxification unit in London has been requisitioned as a COVID-19 step-down facility. The aim of the study is to understand the influence of lockdown on the craving of alcohol and severity of alcohol dependence in patients with ArLD. The results from the study will enable us to identify the factors influencing the drinking behaviour during lockdown and a subsequent impact on episodes of decompensation and mortality.

Detailed description

ICoLD, is a collaborative study between the King's College Hospital and SLaM. This is an observational self-report questionnaire study. The study population will comprise of people with alcohol-related chronic liver disease attending the Liver Outpatients and those admitted to the King's College Hospital. The study groups will be people who were abstinent of alcohol and people who have had history of alcohol consumption prior to lockdown. The study will ascertain drinking behaviour prior to lock down and during lock down/COVID restrictions. The study uses the Severity of Alcohol Dependence Questionnaire (SADQ) to ascertain the severity of physiological dependence and the Obsessive compulsive Drinking Scale (OCDS) to characterise craving. The SADQ, OCDS and detailed Alcohol history is usually collected as a standard of care in patients with AUD. The study will also investigate factors that could influence drinking behaviour during lockdown such as access to alcohol, affordability, pub closure/less socialising, boredom, time to reflect on health and psycho-social factors. Data on drinking behaviour, SADQ score and OCDS will be collected at any future lockdowns. Patients with ArLD will be identified from the Liver outpatients or approached during their Hospital admission. Approximately, 700 patients with ArLD are followed in the Liver outpatients. 200 patients will be enrolled during the lockdown period, considering drop outs and a proportion of patients not willing to participate in the study. The study population will be followed up for a year after the final lockdown/COVID restrictions are lifted. No statisticians were involved in planning this study as it is a pilot study to generate hypotheses regarding the drivers of changes in drinking in this population during lockdown.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTStudy questionnaireStudy questionnaire related to drinking behaviour

Timeline

Start date
2020-10-08
Primary completion
2022-07-31
Completion
2022-07-31
First posted
2021-05-06
Last updated
2021-05-10

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04876443. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.