Abstract
Alcoholic hepatitis is a clinical syndrome with or without pre-existing chronic liver disease (CLD), and the majority of patients present with acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) having a high 28-day mortality. The treatment of alcoholic hepatitis is suboptimal with corticosteroid having one 1month survival benefit but not translated to a survival benefit beyond six months. Survival benefit has been observed in only about 50-60% of treated patients. Long-term survival depends on underlying liver function and abstinence from alcohol. Relapse is reported in nearly half of the patients who recover from alcoholic hepatitis and even up to 17% after liver transplant. The data on repeated episodes of severe alcoholic hepatitis due to relapse and response to therapy are largely unknown. Here, we report a case of alcoholic hepatitis on three occasions in a period of 2 years follow-up and each time treated with steroids and had complete clinical recovery.