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Efficacy of a Brief Alcohol Intervention for Non Dependant Alcohol-misusing Patients Undergoing a Scheduled Surgery

Phase 3
Terminated
Conditions
AOD Misuse
Alcohol Abuse
Alcohol Problem
Interventions
Other: Brief Alcohol intervention
Registration Number
NCT01348113
Lead Sponsor
Rennes University Hospital
Brief Summary

Excessive alcohol consumption is a worldwide major public health problem. Brief interventions have shown to be an efficient treatment modality for problem drinkers, but have never been tested in scheduled surgery.

Patients will be recruited in various surgery units in 7 hospital in France. All patients attending a scheduled surgery will be screened during the visit with the anaesthesist by the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT). Patients aged 30-75 with an AUDIT between 7 and 12, corresponding to at risk or harmful use, will be proposed to enter a control study and randomized between a brief intervention by a trained nurse during the post-surgery hospitalisation and no intervention. Twelve months after the surgery, a research technician will interview by telephone patients and evaluate AUDIT and alcohol consumption of the last month.

Detailed Description

Excessive alcohol consumption is a worldwide major public health problem. Persons who drink more than 2-3 drinks per day are at risk for numerous medical, psychological and social problems. Brief interventions have shown to be an efficient treatment modality for problem drinkers in settings such as primary care, emergencies or psychiatric hospitals by numerous randomized studies. Brief intervention consists typically in a brief assessment, giving patients personal feedback, dealing with resistance and ambivalence, establishing a goal of reduced alcohol use, and giving a workbook; reinforcement visits or calls are included. Brief interventions seem to be particularly effective in patients with alcohol problem without dependence.

Screening for alcohol problem is best done using standardized questionnaires, as the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT), developed by WHO and translated in many languages. The AUDIT allows distinguishing between normal alcohol use, harmful or at risk use and dependence and is easy to use.

No study on brief intervention has been conducted in scheduled surgery. This seems to be a promising situation, since there is first a visit with the anaesthetist, during which screening for alcohol problem should occur, then a hospitalisation, during which the intervention could be made. It is possible that patients are more concerned by their health when they come to hospital for a surgery.

The aim of this controlled, randomized study is to test the hypothesis that a brief intervention, consisting in a visit with a trained nurse, followed by a telephone call three months later, in patients with at risk or harmful alcohol use, undergoing a scheduled surgery, could be efficient to promote the decrease of alcohol consumption.

Patients will be screened during the visit with the anaesthetist with AUDIT. Patients with AUDIT between 7 and 12 will be proposed to enter the study, and randomised between Brief Intervention and no intervention. A research technician will interview patients 12 months after the surgery, with assessment of the AUDIT and alcohol consumption. CDT and GGT will be measured prior to surgery, then at 12 months after surgery.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
TERMINATED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
3
Inclusion Criteria
  • Man or woman
  • Aged 30 to 75 years old
  • With a scheduled surgery
  • Presenting an Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test score between 7 and 12 (included) during the routine visit with the anaesthesist prior to hospitalisation
  • Being capable of understanding the information note
  • Who gave a written informed consent
  • Affiliated to a medical insurance

Non inclusion Criteria:

  • Surgery in relation to alcohol consumption (chronic pancreatitis, oropharyngeal cancer for example) or modifying alcohol consumption (liver transplantation for example),
  • No telephone number
  • Dependence to alcohol (Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test score ≥ 13)
  • History of alcohol weaning complications
  • History of addiction care
  • Life expectancy less than 5 years
  • Decompensated psychiatric disease
  • Usual consumption (more than three times a week) of illicit products
  • Person deprived of freedom or under guardianship
  • Participation or intent to participate in another biomedical research
Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Brief Alcohol InterventionBrief Alcohol intervention-
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Rate of patients getting back to an Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test score <71 year
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Proportion of total population presenting an increase in gamma-GT and CDT in comparison with upper limits of normal6 months
Evolution of the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test score1 year
Alcohol consumption in the month preceding the final evaluation at 1 year1 year
Gamma-GT and CDT evolution1 year
Frequency of normalization of gamma-GT and CDT measures1 year
Rate of patients in the Brief Alcohol Intervention group getting back to an Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test score <7, with stratification on the Prochaska score1 year
Feeling of the patients towards the Brief Alcohol Intervention1 year

recollection, acceptability, relevance, recollection of the recall at 3 months, acceptability of the recall at 3 months

Prevalence of alcohol misuse, with or without dependence, in patients seen in pre-anaesthesia consultation6 months

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Unité d'Alcoologie et Hépatologie Générale, Département d'Anesthésie Réanimation- Hôpital de Pontchaillou

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Rennes, France

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