Background: Alcohol use disorders represent a major health burden. Efforts aiming at reducing alcohol-related harm include early detection of those with risky drinking habits as well detection of early relapse in patients with alcohol dependence who are detoxified and committed to abstinence. Recently, ethyl glucuronide has been proved to be a good biomarker for the detection of recent drinking. However, to date, no randomized diagnostic trial has tested its impact on drinking outcomes. The aim of this study was to assess, with a randomized design, the implications of ethyl glucuronide screening on alcohol outcomes, compared to screening with a low-sensitivity biomarker such as ethanol. Methods: alcohol dependent outpatients were randomized to either 24 weeks of continuous screening with ethyl glucuronide or ethanol. Patients were aware of screening methods and results. After 24 weeks, all participants were screened with ethyl glucuronide. Self-reports were also gathered. A logistic regression model was performed comparing the rate of ethyl glucuronide positive results at study end between groups. Generalized estimating equations were performed to evaluate the descending rate of EtG positive patients in the EtG group, measured month to month.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SCREENING
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
162
alcohol urine screening with ethyl glucuronide
alcohol urine screening with ethanol
ethyl glucuronide positive rate
Percentage of patients screening positive to EtG at study end in each group
Time frame: after six months of ongoing urine screening
descending of Etg positive rates in the Etg group
varying rate of EtG positive patinets in the intervention group during the study period
Time frame: six months of ongoing urine screening
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