| Literature DB >> 30938130 |
Raffaele Pezzilli1,2, Fabio Caputo3,4, Gianni Testino5, Valentino Patussi6, Giovanni Greco7, Livia Macciò8, Maria Raffaella Rossin9, Davide Mioni10, Patrizia Balbinot5, Claudia Gandin11, Francesca Zanesini12, Luca Frulloni13, Sarino Aricò14, Luigi C Bottaro15, Rinaldo Pellicano16, Emanuele Scafato11.
Abstract
Current estimates of the prevalence of chronic pancreatitis, one of the most common causes of exocrine pancreatic insufficiency, are in the range of 3-10 per 100,000 people in many parts of the world. Alcohol consumption is a very important risk factor for exocrine pancreatic insufficiency and is involved in nearly half of all cases. The main hypothesis regarding the role of chronic alcohol consumption in pancreatitis is that there must be additional environmental or genetic risk factors involved for ongoing damage to occur. Treatment of patients with alcohol-related exocrine pancreatic insufficiency is complex, as the patient has two concomitant pathologies, alcohol-use disorder (AUD) and exocrine pancreatic insufficiency/chronic pancreatitis. Alcohol abstinence is the starting point for treatment, although even this along with the most advanced therapies allow only a slowdown in progression rather than restoration of function. This position paper of the Italian Association for the Study of the Pancreas and the Italian Society of Alcohology provides an overview of the pathogenesis of alcohol-related pancreatitis and discuss diagnostic issues. Treatment options for both exocrine pancreatic insufficiency/chronic pancreatitis (with a focus on pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy) and AUD (acamprosate, disulfiram, oral naltrexone, long-acting injectable naltrexone, sodium oxybate, nalmefene, baclofen, and psychosocial interventions) are also reviewed.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30938130 DOI: 10.23736/S0026-4806.19.06043-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Minerva Med ISSN: 0026-4806 Impact factor: 4.806