Abstract

Young adults with alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD) are the fastest increasing demographic contributing to liver-related deaths; their outcomes after liver transplantation (LT) are understudied. Using the United Network for Organ Sharing registry, we performed sex-specific analyses because of a significant interaction between sex and the explanatory variable, age. Cox regression was used with overall post-LT death as the primary outcome, adjusted for survival characteristics and center clustering. We calculated the absolute difference in adjusted 5-year post-LT survival between patient groups. Causes of death were supplemented by manual review of free-text entries. Among 42,014 LT recipients, 16,190 women (2,782 with ALD and 13,408 without ALD) and 25,824 men (9,502 with ALD and 16,322 without ALD), age of 40-50 years had the lowest risk of death. Women with ALD younger than 40 years had incrementally lower adjusted 5-year survival (95% confidence interval): 74% (63%-88%) for those aged 18-29 years, 82% (78%-87%) for those aged 30-39 years, and 90% (88%-92%) for those aged 40-49 years. Among women without ALD, men with ALD, and men without ALD, adjusted 5-year survival for ages 18-29, 30-39, and 40-49 years was similar. Among women, not men, there were significant interactions between younger age and ALD. Adjusted hazard for mortality for women with ALD vs without ALD was greater for those who aged 18-29 years (2.82 vs 1.09, P = 0.002) and 30-39 years (1.83 vs 1.09, P = 0.007 [reference age 40-49 years]). Among women with ALD, those aged 18-29 and 30-39 years had an absolute 17.7% and 9.5% excess in adjusted 5-year mortality vs similarly aged women without ALD. Young women (age < 40) with ALD have excess mortality beyond one-year post-LT. Recurrent disease or explicit mention of alcohol was the most common identified cause of death in this demographic.

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