Stockwell Tim, Zhao Jinhui, Panwar Sapna, Roemer Audra, Naimi Timothy, Chikritzhs Tanya
Centre for Addictions Research of BC, University of Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.
National Drug Research Institute, Curtin University, Perth, WA 6845, Australia.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2016 Mar;77(2):185-98. doi: 10.15288/jsad.2016.77.185.
Previous meta-analyses of cohort studies indicate a J-shaped relationship between alcohol consumption and allcause mortality, with reduced risk for low-volume drinkers. However, low-volume drinkers may appear healthy only because the "abstainers" with whom they are compared are biased toward ill health. The purpose of this study was to determine whether misclassifying former and occasional drinkers as abstainers and other potentially confounding study characteristics underlie observed positive health outcomes for lowvolume drinkers in prospective studies of all-cause mortality.
A systematic review and meta-regression analysis of studies investigating alcohol use and mortality risk after controlling for quality-related study characteristics was conducted in a population of 3,998,626 individuals, among whom 367,103 deaths were recorded.
Without adjustment, meta-analysis of all 87 included studies replicated the classic J-shaped curve, with low-volume drinkers (1.3-24.9 g ethanol per day) having reduced mortality risk (RR = 0.86, 95% CI [0.83, 0.90]). Occasional drinkers (<1.3 g per day) had similar mortality risk (RR = 0.84, 95% CI [0.79, 0.89]), and former drinkers had elevated risk (RR = 1.22, 95% CI [1.14, 1.31]). After adjustment for abstainer biases and quality-related study characteristics, no significant reduction in mortality risk was observed for low-volume drinkers (RR = 0.97, 95% CI [0.88, 1.07]). Analyses of higher-quality bias-free studies also failed to find reduced mortality risk for low-volume alcohol drinkers. Risk estimates for occasional drinkers were similar to those for low- and medium-volume drinkers.
Estimates of mortality risk from alcohol are significantly altered by study design and characteristics. Meta-analyses adjusting for these factors find that low-volume alcohol consumption has no net mortality benefit compared with lifetime abstention or occasional drinking. These findings have implications for public policy, the formulation of low-risk drinking guidelines, and future research on alcohol and health.
既往对队列研究的荟萃分析表明,饮酒量与全因死亡率之间呈J形关系,少量饮酒者风险降低。然而,少量饮酒者看似健康,可能只是因为与之比较的“戒酒者”健康状况不佳存在偏差。本研究的目的是确定在前瞻性全因死亡率研究中,将既往饮酒者和偶尔饮酒者误分类为戒酒者以及其他潜在的混杂研究特征是否是观察到的少量饮酒者积极健康结局的原因。
在3998626名个体中进行了一项系统评价和荟萃回归分析,这些研究在控制了与质量相关的研究特征后,调查了饮酒与死亡风险的关系,其中记录了367103例死亡。
未经调整时,对所有纳入的87项研究进行的荟萃分析重现了经典的J形曲线,少量饮酒者(每天摄入1.3 - 24.9克乙醇)死亡风险降低(RR = 0.86,95%CI [0.83, 0.90])。偶尔饮酒者(每天<1.3克)死亡风险相似(RR = 0.84,95%CI [0.79, 0.89]),既往饮酒者风险升高(RR = 1.22,95%CI [1.14, 1.31])。在调整了戒酒者偏差和与质量相关的研究特征后,未观察到少量饮酒者的死亡风险有显著降低(RR = 0.97,95%CI [0.88, 1.07])。对高质量无偏差研究的分析也未发现少量饮酒者的死亡风险降低。偶尔饮酒者的风险估计与少量和中等饮酒者相似。
研究设计和特征会显著改变酒精导致的死亡风险估计。对这些因素进行调整的荟萃分析发现,与终生戒酒或偶尔饮酒相比,少量饮酒没有净死亡益处。这些发现对公共政策、低风险饮酒指南的制定以及未来酒精与健康的研究具有启示意义。