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Annals of Hepatology CHARACTERIZATION OF THE UNRECORDED ALCOHOL USE WORLDWIDE: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW AN...
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Vol. 30. Issue S2.
Abstracts of the 2025 Annual Meeting of the ALEH
(September 2025)
Vol. 30. Issue S2.
Abstracts of the 2025 Annual Meeting of the ALEH
(September 2025)
#143
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CHARACTERIZATION OF THE UNRECORDED ALCOHOL USE WORLDWIDE: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW AND SURVEY-BASED STUDY
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Katherine Emilia Maldonado Cardona1, Hanna Blaney2, Deepika Devuni3, Muzzafar Haque4, Pojsakorn Danpanichkul5, Francisco Idalsoaga6, Vinay Jahagirdar7, Kaanthi Rama7, Natalia Baeza6, Frank Murray8, Patrick Kamath9, Ramon Bataller10, Marco Arrese6, Jeffrey Lazarus11, Luis Antonio Díaz12, Juan Pablo Arab7
1 Clínica de gastroenterología Intera, Guatemala.
2 MedStar Georgetown University Hospital. Medstar Transplant Hepatology Institute, USA.
3 Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology. UMass Chan Medical School, USA.
4 Department of Internal Medicine. College of Medicine. University of Saskatchewan, Canada.
5 Department of Medicine. Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, USA.
6 Departamento de Gastroenterología. Escuela de Medicina. Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile.
7 Division of Gastroenterology. Hepatology. and Nutrition. Department of Internal Medicine. Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine, USA.
8 Department of Medicine. Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland. Beaumont Hospital, Ireland.
9 Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology. Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and Science, USA.
10 Liver Unit. Hospital Clinic, Barcelona.
11 Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal), España.
12 MASLD Research Center. Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology. University of California San Diego, USA.
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Vol. 30. Issue S2

Abstracts of the 2025 Annual Meeting of the ALEH

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Introduction and Objectives

Unrecorded alcohol - products that escape taxation, regulation, and safety checks - represents up to one quarter of world alcohol intake and is strongly linked to hazardous drinking and alcohol-related liver disease. Knowledge gaps regarding unrecorded alcohol worldwide need to be addressed to better inform region-specific harm reduction strategies.

To characterize the population, contemporary consumption patterns, and physicians' interest in unrecorded alcohol worldwide.

Materials and Methods

Cross-sectional survey-based study. Data was collected between August and November 2024, distributing a 19 item electronic questionnaire to hepatology-focused physicians worldwide. Responses were categorized into 15 geographic regions and were analyzed by descriptive statistics.

Results

We collected 116 survey responses from 44 countries. Homemade alcohol was the predominant form of unrecorded alcohol consumed, representing the largest share in most regions. Consumers were predominantly male and of working age. Rural consumption of homemade alcohol exceeded that of urban areas, whereas smuggled and cross-border alcohol were mainly consumed in urban areas. Among at-risk groups unrecorded alcohol consumption was highest in drug users and lowest in pregnant women and prisioners. Binge drinking was the most pattern for homemade, illegal, and smuggled alcohol; heavy drinking predominated for surrogate alcohol; and moderate drinking was most common for cross-border purchases. Sub-Saharan Africa had the highest prevalence of heavy drinking across all unrecorded alcohol categories, whereas North America had the highest prevalence of heavy drinking in the surrogate alcohol category. Only 21% of physicians reported "always" asking patients about unrecorded alcohol use, whereas 4.6% reported "never" doing so. A combined 52% indicated they "usually" or "Rarely" ask about unrecorded alcohol use.

Conclusions

Unrecorded alcohol use is widespread, driven by homemade sources, with higher prevalence in rural areas and among people who consume drugs, while physician screening remains limited.

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Conflict of interest: None

Dominat type of unrecorded alcohol by region

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