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RESEARCH PRODUCT

The association between education level and chronic liver disease of any etiology

Evangelista SagnelliFilomena MoriscoMaurizio RusselloSergio BabudieriCaterina SagnelliCaterina FurlanMariantonietta PisaturoMario PirisiPiero Luigi AlmasioAntonina SmedileTommaso Stroffolini

subject

Liver Cirrhosismedicine.medical_specialtyCirrhosisAlcohol DrinkingLiver CirrhosiDisease030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyEducational settingChronic liver diseaseLogistic regressionChronic disease03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineNon-alcoholic Fatty Liver DiseaseInternal medicineHBVInternal MedicinemedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineStage (cooking)Association (psychology)Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease.business.industryLiver DiseasesLiver DiseaseFatty liverMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseItalyHCVEtiologyLiver disorderAlcoholbusinessHumanLiver disorders

description

Abstract Background The potential link between educational level and chronic liver diseases (CLD) were explored using the mortality records of liver cirrhosis, which lack accuracy and are unable to identify the different etiological factors of liver cirrhosis. Information on the association of low educational level with the severity of CLD is lacking. Aim To evaluate the potential association linking education level to etiology and clinical stage of CLD cases. Methods Consecutive enrolment of 11,107 subjects with CLD aged≥18 years prospectively recruited in two national surveys in 2001 and 2014 at one of the participating Italian liver units throughout the country. Subjects were pooled in two groups: low education level (less than high school) and high education level (completed high school or beyond). The association of demographic, etiological, and clinical stage of subjects with educational level was assessed using logistic regression analysis. In the analysis low educational level was the outcome variable. Results A total of 11,107 subjects born in Italy (mean age 55.5 years, sex ratio 1.5) were evaluated. Multiple logistic regression analysis shows that chronic HCV infection (O.R.1,38:95%,C.I.1.23-1.55), risky alcohol intake (O.R.1.96;95%,C.I.1.73-2.21) and liver cirrhosis (O.R.1.65;95%,C.I.1.46-1.85) all resulted independently associated with less than a completed high school education. HBV infection resulted independently associated with high education level (O.R.0.74;95%,C.I.0.64-0.86), reflecting changes in HBV modes of transmission in recent decades. No association was found with CLD related to non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (O.R.1.03;95%, C.I.0.81-1.30). Conclusions These findings show an independent association linking education level with viruses and alcohol-related CLD. Low educational level is associated with the severity of CLD.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejim.2020.01.008