Abstract: | We investigated drinking behaviour and psychiatric outcome ofpatients with alcoholic liver disease after liver transplantation,to help assess the advisability of the procedure in these patients.English-speaking patients (n = 20) transplanted for alcoholicliver disease and informants, and patients transplanted fornon-alcoholic liver disease (n = 54), were assessed by semi-structuredinterviews and standardized questionnaires 16 years followingtransplantation. All alcoholics were abstinent for several monthsafter transplantation, but only one patient remained totallyabstinent. Sixteen of the 20 alcoholics later returned to regulardrinking; the mean daily alcohol consumption was 3.5 units.Forty percent of the group were drinking above the recommendedsafe levels for the general population and over 50% were bingedrinking intermittently. The alcoholic liver transplant patientsdid not have higher levels of psychiatric or physical morbiditythan controls. Patients with alcoholic liver disease returnto drinking after a period of abstinence following liver transplantation,although at lower levels than before. Their vulnerability toalcohol abuse is not explained by higher levels of physicalor psychiatric morbidity. |