TY - JOUR AU - Peresztegi, M AU - Vereczkei, Zsófia AU - Farkas, N AU - Szakács, Z AU - Bajor, Judit TI - A COELIAKIA VÁLTOZÓ KLINIKAI MEGJELENÉSÉT BEFOLYÁSOLÓ TÉNYEZŐK JF - MAGYAR BELORVOSI ARCHIVUM J2 - MBA VL - 76 PY - 2023 IS - 5-6 SP - 329 EP - 329 PG - 1 SN - 0133-5464 UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34566488 ID - 34566488 LA - Hungarian DB - MTMT ER - TY - JOUR AU - Nagy, Rita AU - Ocskay, Klementina AU - Sipos, Zoltán AU - Szentesi, Andrea Ildikó AU - Vincze, Áron AU - Czakó, László AU - Izbéki, Ferenc AU - Shirinskaya, Natalia V AU - Poluektov, Vladimir L AU - Zolotov, Alexandr N AU - Zhu, Yin AU - Xia, Liang AU - He, Wenhua AU - Sutton, Robert AU - Szatmary, Peter AU - Mukherjee, Rajarshi AU - Burridge, Isobel Saffron AU - Wauchope, Emma AU - Francisco, Elsa AU - Aparicio, David AU - Pinto, Bruno AU - Gomes, António AU - Nunes, Vitor AU - Tantau, Vasile Marcel AU - Sagau, Emanuela Denisa AU - Tantau, Alina Ioana AU - Suceveanu, Andra Iulia AU - Tocia, Cristina AU - Dumitru, Andrei AU - Pando, Elizabeth AU - Alberti, Piero AU - Cirera, Arturo AU - Molero, Xavier AU - Lee, Hong Sik AU - Jung, Min Kyu AU - Kim, Eui Joo AU - Lee, Sanghyub AU - Rebollo, María Lourdes Ruiz AU - Nistal, Reyes Busta AU - Santervas, Sandra Izquierdo AU - Lesko, Dusan AU - Soltes, Marek AU - Radonak, Jozef AU - Zatorski, Hubert AU - Małecka-Panas, Ewa AU - Fabisiak, Adam AU - Yaroslav, M Susak AU - Mykhailo, V Maksymenko AU - Olekcandr, A Tkachenko AU - Barauskas, Giedrius AU - Simanaitis, Vytautas AU - Ignatavicius, Povilas AU - Jinga, Mariana AU - Balaban, Vasile-Daniel AU - Patoni, Cristina AU - Gong, Liang AU - Song, Kai AU - Li, Yunlong AU - Gonçalves, T Cúrdia AU - Freitas, Marta AU - Macedo, Vítor AU - Vornhuelz, Marlies AU - Klauss, Sarah AU - Beyer, Georg AU - Koksal, Aydin Seref AU - Tozlu, Mukaddes AU - Eminler, Ahmet Tarik AU - Monclús, Nuria Torres AU - Comas, Eva Pijoan AU - Oballe, Juan Armando Rodriguez AU - Nawacki, Łukasz AU - Głuszek, Stanisław AU - Rama-Fernández, Alberto AU - Galego, Marco AU - de la Iglesia, Daniel AU - Aykut, Umut Emre AU - Duman, Deniz Güney AU - Aslan, Rahmi AU - Gherbon, Adriana AU - Deng, Lihui AU - Huang, Wei AU - Xia, Qing AU - Poropat, Goran AU - Radovan, Anja AU - Vranić, Luka AU - Ricci, Claudio AU - Ingaldi, Carlo AU - Casadei, Riccardo AU - Negoi, Ionut AU - Ciubotaru, Cezar AU - Iordache, Florin Mihail AU - Constantinescu, Gabriel AU - Sandru, Vasile AU - Altintas, Engin AU - Balci, Hatice Rizaoglu AU - Constantino, Júlio AU - Aveiro, Débora AU - Pereira, Jorge AU - Gunay, Suleyman AU - Misirlioglu Sucan, Seda AU - Dronov, Oleksiy AU - Kovalska, Inna AU - Bush, Nikhil AU - Rana, Surinder Singh AU - Chooklin, Serge AU - Chuklin, Serhii AU - Saizu, Ionut Adrian AU - Gheorghe, Cristian AU - Göltl, Philipp AU - Hirth, Michael AU - Mateescu, Radu Bogdan AU - Papuc, Geanina AU - Minkov, Georgi Angelov AU - Enchev, Emil Tihomirov AU - Mastrangelo, Laura AU - Jovine, Elio AU - Chen, Weiwei AU - Zhu, Quping AU - Gąsiorowska, Anita AU - Fabisiak, Natalia AU - Bezmarevic, Mihailo AU - Litvin, Andrey AU - Mottes, Martina Cattani AU - Choi, Eun Kwang AU - Bánovčin, Peter AU - Nosáková, Lenka AU - Kovacheva-Slavova, Mila Dimitrova AU - Kchaou, Ali AU - Tlili, Ahmed AU - Marino, Marco V AU - Kusnierz, Katarzyna AU - Mickevicius, Artautas AU - Hollenbach, Marcus AU - Molcan, Pavol AU - Ioannidis, Orestis AU - Tokarev, Mark Valerievich AU - Ince, Ali Tüzün AU - Semenenko, Ivan Albertovich AU - Galeev, Shamil AU - Ramírez-Maldonado, Elena AU - Sallinen, Ville AU - Pencik, Petr AU - Bajor, Judit AU - Sarlós, Patrícia AU - Hágendorn, Roland AU - Gódi, Szilárd AU - Szabó, Imre AU - Czimmer, József AU - Pár, Gabriella AU - Illés, Anita AU - Faluhelyi, Nándor AU - Kanizsai, Péter László AU - Nagy, Tamás AU - Mikó, Alexandra AU - Németh, Balázs AU - Hamvas, József AU - Bod, Barnabás AU - Varga, Márta AU - Török, Imola AU - Novák, János AU - Patai, Árpád AU - Sümegi, János AU - Góg, Csaba AU - Papp, Mária AU - Erőss, Bálint Mihály AU - Váncsa, Szilárd AU - Teutsch, Brigitta AU - Márta, Katalin AU - Hegyi, Péter Jenő AU - Tornai, Tamás AU - Lázár, Balázs AU - Hussein, Tamás AU - Tarján, Dorottya AU - Lipp, Mónika Bernadett AU - Kovács, Beáta AU - Urbán, Orsolya AU - Fürst, Emese Rita AU - Tari, Edina AU - Kocsis, Ibolya AU - Maurovich-Horvat, Pál AU - Tihanyi, Balázs AU - Eperjesi, Orsolya AU - Kormos, Zita AU - Deák, Pál Ákos AU - Párniczky, Andrea AU - Hegyi, Péter TI - Discharge protocol in acute pancreatitis: an international survey and cohort analysis JF - SCIENTIFIC REPORTS J2 - SCI REP VL - 13 PY - 2023 IS - 1 PG - 10 SN - 2045-2322 DO - 10.1038/s41598-023-48480-z UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34434496 ID - 34434496 AB - There are several overlapping clinical practice guidelines in acute pancreatitis (AP), however, none of them contains suggestions on patient discharge. The Hungarian Pancreatic Study Group (HPSG) has recently developed a laboratory data and symptom-based discharge protocol which needs to be validated. (1) A survey was conducted involving all members of the International Association of Pancreatology (IAP) to understand the characteristics of international discharge protocols. (2) We investigated the safety and effectiveness of the HPSG-discharge protocol. According to our international survey, 87.5% (49/56) of the centres had no discharge protocol. Patients discharged based on protocols have a significantly shorter median length of hospitalization (LOH) (7 (5;10) days vs. 8 (5;12) days) p < 0.001), and a lower rate of readmission due to recurrent AP episodes (p = 0.005). There was no difference in median discharge CRP level among the international cohorts (p = 0.586). HPSG-protocol resulted in the shortest LOH (6 (5;9) days) and highest median CRP (35.40 (13.78; 68.40) mg/l). Safety was confirmed by the low rate of readmittance (n = 35; 5%). Discharge protocol is necessary in AP. The discharge protocol used in this study is the first clinically proven protocol. Developing and testifying further protocols are needed to better standardize patients' care. LA - English DB - MTMT ER - TY - JOUR AU - Vereczkei, Zsófia AU - Imrei, Marcell AU - Szakács, Zsolt AU - Kővári, Bálint AU - Papp, Veronika AU - Lénárt, Zsuzsanna AU - Berki, Tímea AU - Szirmay, Balázs AU - Borbásné Farkas, Kornélia AU - Balaskó, Márta AU - Habon, Tamás AU - Hegyi, Péter AU - Bajor, Judit TI - Cardiovascular risk factors in coeliac disease (ARCTIC): a protocol of multicentre series of studies JF - BMJ OPEN J2 - BMJ OPEN VL - 13 PY - 2023 IS - 9 PG - 8 SN - 2044-6055 DO - 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-068989 UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34140873 ID - 34140873 N1 - Institute for Translational Medicine, Medical School, University of Pecs, Pecs, Hungary Centre for Translational Medicine, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary Heim Pal National Pediatric Institute, Budapest, Hungary First Department of Medicine, Medical School, University of Pecs, Pecs, Hungary Department of Surgery, Transplantation and Gastroenterology, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary First Department of Internal Medicine, Albert Szent-Györgyi Medical School, University of Szeged, Szeged, Hungary Department of Immunology and Biotechnology, Medical School, University of Pecs, Pecs, Hungary Department of Laboratory Medicine, Medical School, University of Pecs, Pecs, Hungary Institute of Bioanalysis, Medical School, University of Pecs, Pecs, Hungary Division of Pancreatic Diseases, Heart and Vascular Center, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary Export Date: 18 February 2024 Correspondence Address: Bajor, J.; First Department of Medicine, Hungary; email: bajor.judit@pte.hu LA - English DB - MTMT ER - TY - JOUR AU - Vereczkei, Zsófia AU - Dergez, Tímea AU - Fodor, Zsuzsanna AU - Szakács, Zsolt AU - Bajor, Judit TI - Body Mass Index during Gluten-Free Diet in Patients with Celiac Disease JF - NUTRIENTS J2 - NUTRIENTS VL - 15 PY - 2023 IS - 16 PG - 13 SN - 2072-6643 DO - 10.3390/nu15163517 UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34095089 ID - 34095089 N1 - Funding Agency and Grant Number: Authors would like to thank Jon Eugene Marquette for language proofreading. Funding text: Authors would like to thank Jon Eugene Marquette for language proofreading. AB - The association of clinical variables with body mass index (BMI) and changes experienced during a gluten-free diet (GFD) in celiac disease (CD) is not well established. In this retrospective cohort study, we aimed to investigate factors aligned with baseline and a follow-up regarding BMI in CD cases diagnosed at the University of Pécs (Hungary). Data were collected regarding gender, age, clinical presentation, histology, serology, extraintestinal manifestations, and BMI upon diagnosis and during follow-up. To compare variables with baseline BMI and BMI changes in short-, intermediate-, and long-term periods, we applied univariate analyses. A total of 192 CD patients were included. Males had significantly higher mean BMI when compared with females at diagnosis (22.9 ± 4.1 vs. 21.4 ± 4.3 kg/m2, p = 0.041) and during follow-up (p = 0.031, p = 0.029, and p = 0.033 for short-, intermediate-, and long-term follow-ups, respectively). Non-classical CD patients experienced higher mean BMI at diagnosis (22.9 ± 4.0 vs. 20.7 ± 4.4 kg/m2, p < 0.001) and following long-term follow-up (24.5 ± 3.2 vs. 22.6 ± 3.4 kg/m2, p = 0.039) than classical patients. In conclusion, although the mean BMI remained in the normal range, it increased significantly during follow-up, even at the short-term follow-up. This change was characteristic for non-classical cases and males on the long-term follow-ups. LA - English DB - MTMT ER - TY - JOUR AU - Szakács, Zsolt AU - Borbásné Farkas, Kornélia AU - Nagy, Enikő AU - Bencs, Réka AU - Vereczkei, Zsófia AU - Bajor, Judit TI - Clinical Presentation Is Dependent on Age and Calendar Year of Diagnosis in Celiac Disease : A Hungarian Cross-Sectional Study JF - JOURNAL OF PERSONALIZED MEDICINE J2 - J PERS MED VL - 13 PY - 2023 IS - 3 PG - 10 SN - 2075-4426 DO - 10.3390/jpm13030487 UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/33728537 ID - 33728537 N1 - Cited By :1 Export Date: 11 September 2023 Correspondence Address: Bajor, J.; First Department of Medicine, Ifjúság Str 13, Hungary; email: bajor.judit@pte.hu AB - International trends indicate that celiac disease (CeD) is becoming more common, while the clinical presentation of CeD tends to change. We aimed to investigate factors associated with the clinical presentation of CeD. We reviewed all CeD cases diagnosed at our tertiary center, University of Pécs (Hungary), between 1992 and 2019. We collected data of verified CeD patients on clinical presentations (classified by the Oslo Classification), the age at and calendar year of diagnosis, and sex, serology and histology at diagnosis. To assess the associations of baseline variables with clinical presentations, we applied univariate and multivariate (binary logistic regression) statistics. A total of 738 CeD patients were eligible for inclusion. In the univariate analysis, patients with classical CeD were more common in the latest calendar period (p < 0.001) and tended to be older (p = 0.056), but we failed to observe a significant association between the clinical presentation and sex, serology or histology at diagnosis. In the multivariate analysis, only age at diagnosis and calendar year were independently associated with clinical presentations (OR = 1.02, CI: 1.01-1.04 and OR = 0.93, CI: 0.89-0.98, respectively). Our findings confirmed that classical CeD is independently associated with age at diagnosis and calendar year of diagnosis of CeD, whereas other parameters were not significantly associated with clinical presentations. LA - English DB - MTMT ER - TY - JOUR AU - Kovács, Norbert AU - Pécsi, Dániel AU - Sipos, Zoltán AU - Borbásné Farkas, Kornélia AU - Földi, Mária AU - Hegyi, Péter AU - Bajor, Judit AU - Erőss, Bálint Mihály AU - Márta, Katalin AU - Mikó, Alexandra AU - Rakonczay, Zoltán AU - Sarlós, Patrícia AU - Ábrahám, Szabolcs AU - Vincze, Áron TI - Suprapapillary Biliary Stents Have Longer Patency Times than Transpapillary Stents-A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. JF - JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE J2 - J CLIN MED VL - 12 PY - 2023 IS - 3 PG - 16 SN - 2077-0383 DO - 10.3390/jcm12030898 UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/33636629 ID - 33636629 N1 - * Megosztott szerzőség AB - Endoscopic biliary stent placement is a minimally invasive intervention for patients with biliary strictures. Stent patency and function time are crucial factors. Suprapapillary versus transpapillary stent positioning may contribute to stent function time, so a meta-analysis was performed in this comparison.A comprehensive literature search was conducted in the CENTRAL, Embase, and MEDLINE databases to find data on suprapapillary stent placement compared to the transpapillary method via endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography in cases of biliary stenosis of any etiology and any stent type until December 2020. We carried out a meta-analysis focusing on the following outcomes: stent patency, stent migration, rate of cholangitis and pancreatitis, and other reported complications.Three prospective and ten retrospective studies involving 1028 patients were included. Suprapapillary stent placement appeared to be superior to transpapillary stent positioning in patency (weighted mean difference = 50.23 days, 95% CI: 8.56, 91.98; p = 0.0.018). In a subgroup analysis of malignant indications, suprapapillary positioning showed a lower rate of cholangitis (OR: 0.34, 95% CI: 0.13, 0.93; p = 0.036). Another subgroup analysis investigating metal stents in a suprapapillary position resulted in a lower rate of pancreatitis (OR: 0.16, 95% CI: 0.03, 0.95; p = 0.043) compared to transpapillary stent placement. There was no difference in stent migration rates between the two groups (OR: 0.67, 95% CI: 0.17, 2.72; p = 0.577).Based on our results, suprapapillary biliary stenting has longer stent patency. Moreover, the stent migration rate did not differ between the suprapapillary and transpapillary groups. LA - English DB - MTMT ER - TY - JOUR AU - Bajor, Judit TI - Az ételintoleranciák diagnosztikájának és kezelésének fontosabb szempontjai JF - HÁZIORVOS TOVÁBBKÉPZŐ SZEMLE J2 - HÁZIORVOS TOVÁBBKÉPZŐ SZEMLE VL - 27 PY - 2022 IS - 7 SP - 433 EP - 438 PG - 6 SN - 1219-8641 UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/33079004 ID - 33079004 LA - Hungarian DB - MTMT ER - TY - JOUR AU - Kovács, Norbert AU - Németh, Dávid AU - Földi, Mária AU - Nagy, Bernadette AU - Bunduc, Stefania AU - Hegyi, Péter AU - Bajor, Judit AU - Müller, Katalin Eszter AU - Vincze, Áron AU - Erőss, Bálint Mihály AU - Ábrahám, Szabolcs TI - Selective intraoperative cholangiography should be considered over routine intraoperative cholangiography during cholecystectomy : a systematic review and meta-analysis JF - SURGICAL ENDOSCOPY AND OTHER INTERVENTIONAL TECHNIQUES J2 - SURG ENDOSC VL - 36 PY - 2022 IS - 10 SP - 7126 EP - 7139 PG - 14 SN - 0930-2794 DO - 10.1007/s00464-022-09267-x UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/32925017 ID - 32925017 N1 - Export Date: 13 October 2023 Correspondence Address: Ábrahám, S.; Department of Surgery, Semmelweis u. 8, Hungary; email: abraham.szabolcs@med.u-szeged.hu AB - Decades of debate surround the use of intraoperative cholangiography (IOC) during cholecystectomy. To the present day, the role of IOC is controversial as regards decreasing the rate of bile duct injury (BDI). We aimed to review and analyse the available literature on the benefits of IOC during cholecystectomy.A systematic literature search was performed until 19 October 2020 in five databases using the following search keys: cholangiogra* and cholecystectomy. The primary outcomes were BDI and retained stone rate. To investigate the differences between the groups (routine IOC vs selective IOC and IOC vs no IOC), we calculated weighted mean differences (WMD) for continuous outcomes and relative risks (RR) for dichotomous outcomes, with 95% confidence intervals (CI).Of the 19,863 articles, 38 were selected and 32 were included in the quantitative synthesis. Routine IOC showed no superiority compared to selective IOC in decreasing BDI (RR = 0.91, 95% CI 0.66; 1.24). Comparing IOC and no IOC, no statistically significant differences were found in the case of BDI, retained stone rate, readmission rate, and length of hospital stay. We found an increased risk of conversion rate to open surgery in the no IOC group (RR = 0.64, CI 0.51; 0.78). The operation time was significantly longer in the IOC group compared to the no IOC group (WMD = 11.25 min, 95% CI 6.57; 15.93).Our findings suggest that IOC may not be indicated in every case, however, the evidence is very uncertain. Further good quality research is required to address this question. LA - English DB - MTMT ER - TY - JOUR AU - Kui, Balázs AU - Pintér, József AU - Molontay, Roland AU - Nagy, Marcell AU - Borbásné Farkas, Kornélia AU - Gede, Noémi AU - Vincze, Áron AU - Bajor, Judit AU - Gódi, Szilárd AU - Czimmer, József AU - Szabó, Imre AU - Illés, Anita AU - Sarlós, Patrícia AU - Hágendorn, Roland AU - Pár, Gabriella AU - Papp, Mária AU - Vitális, Zsuzsanna AU - Kovács, György AU - Fehér, Eszter AU - Földi, Ildikó AU - Izbéki, Ferenc AU - Gajdán, László AU - Fejes, Roland AU - Németh, Balázs AU - Török, Imola AU - Farkas, Hunor AU - Mickevicius, Artautas AU - Sallinen, Ville AU - Galeev, Shamil AU - Ramírez-Maldonado, Elena AU - Párniczky, Andrea AU - Erőss, Bálint Mihály AU - Hegyi, Péter Jenő AU - Márta, Katalin AU - Váncsa, Szilárd AU - Sutton, Robert AU - Szatmary, Peter AU - Latawiec, Diane AU - Halloran, Chris AU - de-Madaria, Enrique AU - Pando, Elizabeth AU - Alberti, Piero AU - Gómez-Jurado, Maria José AU - Tantau, Alina AU - Szentesi, Andrea Ildikó AU - Hegyi, Péter TI - EASY-APP: An artificial intelligence model and application for early and easy prediction of severity in acute pancreatitis JF - CLINICAL AND TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE J2 - CLIN TRANSL MED VL - 12 PY - 2022 IS - 6 PG - 13 SN - 2001-1326 DO - 10.1002/ctm2.842 UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/32865751 ID - 32865751 N1 - Funding Agency and Grant Number: National Research, Development and Innovation Office Research Fund [K131996, FK131864, K128222, FK124632]; University of Pecs Medical School Research Fund [300909] Funding text: The research was supported by National Research, Development and Innovation Office Research Fund (project grants K131996 to Peter Hegyi, FK131864 to Artautas Mickevicius, K128222 to Laszlo Gajdan, FK124632 to Balazs Csaba Nemeth), and by funding from the University of Pecs Medical School Research Fund (300909) to Andrea Szentesi. The funders had no effect on the concept, data collection, analysis and writing of the manuscript. We wish to thank all further contributing members of the Hungarian Pancreatic Study Group, full names together with affiliations are listed in the Supplementary material. AB - Acute pancreatitis (AP) is a potentially severe or even fatal inflammation of the pancreas. Early identification of patients at high risk for developing a severe course of the disease is crucial for preventing organ failure and death. Most of the former predictive scores require many parameters or at least 24 h to predict the severity; therefore, the early therapeutic window is often missed.The early achievable severity index (EASY) is a multicentre, multinational, prospective and observational study (ISRCTN10525246). The predictions were made using machine learning models. We used the scikit-learn, xgboost and catboost Python packages for modelling. We evaluated our models using fourfold cross-validation, and the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve, the area under the ROC curve (AUC), and accuracy metrics were calculated on the union of the test sets of the cross-validation. The most critical factors and their contribution to the prediction were identified using a modern tool of explainable artificial intelligence called SHapley Additive exPlanations (SHAP).The prediction model was based on an international cohort of 1184 patients and a validation cohort of 3543 patients. The best performing model was an XGBoost classifier with an average AUC score of 0.81 ± 0.033 and an accuracy of 89.1%, and the model improved with experience. The six most influential features were the respiratory rate, body temperature, abdominal muscular reflex, gender, age and glucose level. Using the XGBoost machine learning algorithm for prediction, the SHAP values for the explanation and the bootstrapping method to estimate confidence, we developed a free and easy-to-use web application in the Streamlit Python-based framework (http://easy-app.org/).The EASY prediction score is a practical tool for identifying patients at high risk for severe AP within hours of hospital admission. The web application is available for clinicians and contributes to the improvement of the model. LA - English DB - MTMT ER - TY - JOUR AU - Nagy, Rita AU - Ocskay, Klementina AU - Váradi, Alex AU - Papp, Mária AU - Vitális, Zsuzsanna AU - Izbéki, Ferenc AU - Boros, Eszter AU - Gajdán, László AU - Szentesi, Andrea Ildikó AU - Erőss, Bálint Mihály AU - Hegyi, Péter Jenő AU - Vincze, Áron AU - Bajor, Judit AU - Sarlós, Patrícia AU - Mikó, Alexandra AU - Márta, Katalin AU - Pécsi, Dániel AU - Párniczky, Andrea AU - Hegyi, Péter TI - In-Hospital Patient Education Markedly Reduces Alcohol Consumption after Alcohol-Induced Acute Pancreatitis. JF - NUTRIENTS J2 - NUTRIENTS VL - 14 PY - 2022 IS - 10 PG - 9 SN - 2072-6643 DO - 10.3390/nu14102131 UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/32849790 ID - 32849790 N1 - * Megosztott szerzőség AB - Although excessive alcohol consumption is by far the most frequent cause of recurrent acute pancreatitis (AP) cases, specific therapy is still not well established to prevent recurrence. Generally, psychological therapy (e.g., brief intervention (BI)) is the cornerstone of cessation programs; however, it is not yet widely used in everyday practice. We conducted a post-hoc analysis of a prospectively collected database. Patients suffering from alcohol-induced AP between 2016 and 2021 received 30 min BI by a physician. Patient-reported alcohol consumption, serum gamma-glutamyl-transferase (GGT) level, and mean corpuscular volume (MCV) of red blood cells were collected on admission and at the 1-month follow-up visit to monitor patients' drinking habits. Ninety-nine patients with alcohol-induced AP were enrolled in the study (mean age: 50 ± 11, 89% male). A significant decrease was detected both in mean GGT value (294 ± 251 U/L vs. 103 ± 113 U/L, p < 0.001) and in MCV level (93.7 ± 5.3 U/L vs. 92.1 ± 5.1 U/L, p < 0.001) in patients with elevated on-admission GGT levels. Notably, 79% of the patients (78/99) reported alcohol abstinence at the 1-month control visit. Brief intervention is an effective tool to reduce alcohol consumption and to prevent recurrent AP. Longitudinal randomized clinical studies are needed to identify the adequate structure and frequency of BIs in alcohol-induced AP. LA - English DB - MTMT ER -