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. 2014 Jul 7;20(25):8018–8023. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v20.i25.8018

Table 1.

Characteristic of studies concerning alcoholic liver disease

Study Number of patients Age (yr) Alcohol consumption Exclusion criteria
Rosenberg et al[24] (2004) 64 18-74 No data Any disorder associated with extrahepatic fibrosis; cardiovascular disease or cancer; advanced cirrhosis; regular consumption of aspirin; hepatocellular carcinoma or drug-induced liver disease
Calès et al[20] (2005) 95 18-74 ≥ 50 g/d for the previous 5 yr (mean: 94 g/d ± 50) Other causes of LD or complicated cirrhosis or received antifibrotic treatment within the previous 6 mo
Naveau et al[4] (2005) 221 47 (SE = 0.7) at least 50 g/d over the previous year Concomitant liver disease, HIV antibodies, immune-suppression, hepatic surface antigen, antibodies to HCV, associated severe diseases
Naveau et al[22] (2009) 218 47.1 (SE = 0.7) ≥ 50 g/d during the preceding y (mean 146 g/d, SE = 80 g/d for 17 yr) Concomitant liver disease, human immunodeficiency virus antibodies, immunosupression
Poynard et al[23] (2012) 218 47 (SD = 10.3) No data HIV co-infection

HCV: Hepatitis C virus; LD: Liver disease; HIV: Human immunodeficiency virus.