Phosphatidylethanol measures in patients with severe COVID ‐19‐associated respiratory failure identify a subset with alcohol misuse
Raymond Pomponio, Ryan A. Peterson, Moses Owusu, Suzanne Slaughter, Stephanie Melgar, Sarah E. Jolley, Ellen L. Burnham Abstract
Background
Clinical trials in patients with COVID‐19 have exclusively used self‐ or proxy‐reporting to characterize alcohol consumption. The aim of this study was to measure an objective biomarker of recent alcohol use in patients hospitalized with severe COVID‐19‐associated respiratory failure who were enrolled in an investigational clinical trial to determine the prevalence of alcohol misuse, and to explore the relationship of alcohol use with outcomes.
Methods
We conducted a substudy of patients enrolled in the multicenter, phase 2, adaptive platform design, Investigation of Serial Studies to Predict Your Therapeutic Response with Imaging And molecular Analysis in COVID‐19 trial (
Results
In this cohort, 17% of patients met criteria for significant alcohol use, while 4% met criteria for heavy alcohol use. Alcohol misuse was associated with diminished odds for home discharge, though this finding did not achieve statistical significance.
Conclusions
In a cohort of patients with severe COVID‐19 enrolled in a clinical trial, alcohol consumption of two or more standard drinks per day was present among 21%, approximating the proportion of patients with diabetes, and raising the possibility that alcohol consumption alters risk for severe viral pneumonia. Undetected alcohol misuse among clinical trial participants has the potential to influence study outcomes or contribute to adverse events.