Institute for Mental Health Policy Research, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH), Toronto, Canada; Dalla Lana School of Public Health (DLSPH), University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada; PAHO/WHO Collaborating Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, Canada.
Department of Family and Emergency Medicine, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Canada; University of Montreal Hospital Research Centre (CRCHUM), Montreal, Canada.
Lancet Public Health. 2017 Feb;2(2):e108-e120. doi: 10.1016/S2468-2667(17)30003-8. Epub 2017 Feb 7.
Although it is well established that heavy alcohol consumption increases the risk of hypertension, little is known about the effect of a reduction of alcohol intake on blood pressure. We aimed to assess the effect of a reduction in alcohol consumption on change in blood pressure stratified by initial amount of alcohol consumption and sex in adults.
In this systematic review and meta-analysis, we searched MedLine, Embase, CENTRAL, and ClinicalTrials.gov from database inception up to July 13, 2016, for trials investigating the effect of a change of alcohol consumption on blood pressure in adults using keywords and MeSH terms related to alcohol consumption, blood pressure, and clinical trials, with no language restrictions. We also searched reference lists of identified articles and published meta-analyses and reviews. We included full-text articles with original human trial data for the effect of a change of alcohol consumption on blood pressure in adults, which reported a quantifiable change in average alcohol consumption that lasted at least 7 days and a corresponding change in blood pressure. We extracted data from published reports. We did random-effects meta-analyses stratified by amount of alcohol intake at baseline. All meta-analyses were done with Stata (version 14.1). For the UK, we modelled the effect of a reduction of alcohol consumption for 50% of the population drinking more than two standard drinks per day (ie, 12 g pure alcohol per drink).
36 trials with 2865 participants (2464 men and 401 women) were included. In people who drank two or fewer drinks per day, a reduction in alcohol was not associated with a significant reduction in blood pressure; however, in people who drank more than two drinks per day, a reduction in alcohol intake was associated with increased blood pressure reduction. Reduction in systolic blood pressure (mean difference -5·50 mm Hg, 95% CI -6·70 to -4·30) and diastolic blood pressure (-3·97, -4·70 to -3·25) was strongest in participants who drank six or more drinks per day if they reduced their intake by about 50%. For the UK, the results would translate into more than 7000 inpatient hospitalisations and 678 cardiovascular deaths prevented every year.
Reducing alcohol intake lowers blood pressure in a dose-dependent manner with an apparent threshold effect. Implementation of effective alcohol interventions in people who drink more than two drinks per day would reduce the disease burden from both alcohol consumption and hypertension, and should be prioritised in countries with substantial alcohol-attributable risk.
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
尽管大量饮酒会增加患高血压的风险已得到充分证实,但对于减少饮酒量对血压的影响知之甚少。我们旨在评估减少饮酒量对成年人血压变化的影响,根据初始饮酒量和性别对其进行分层。
在这项系统评价和荟萃分析中,我们检索了 MedLine、Embase、CENTRAL 和 ClinicalTrials.gov,从数据库成立到 2016 年 7 月 13 日,使用与酒精消耗、血压和临床试验相关的关键字和 MeSH 术语,对研究酒精消耗变化对成年人血压影响的试验进行了检索,没有语言限制。我们还检索了已确定文章和已发表荟萃分析和综述的参考文献列表。我们纳入了全文文章,这些文章提供了关于成年人酒精消耗变化对血压影响的原始人体试验数据,这些数据报告了至少持续 7 天的平均酒精消耗可量化的变化,以及相应的血压变化。我们从已发表的报告中提取数据。我们根据基线时的饮酒量进行了随机效应荟萃分析。所有荟萃分析均使用 Stata(版本 14.1)进行。对于英国,我们为每天饮用超过两杯标准饮料(即每杯 12 克纯酒精)的 50%人群饮酒量减少 50%的情况进行了建模。
共纳入 36 项试验,涉及 2865 名参与者(2464 名男性和 401 名女性)。对于每天饮用两杯或更少饮料的人,减少饮酒与血压显著降低无关;然而,对于每天饮用两杯以上饮料的人,减少饮酒量与血压降低幅度增加有关。与每天饮用六杯或更多饮料的人相比,如果他们的摄入量减少约 50%,收缩压(平均差异-5.50mmHg,95%CI-6.70 至-4.30)和舒张压(-3.97,-4.70 至-3.25)的降低幅度最大。对于英国来说,结果将转化为每年超过 7000 例住院和 678 例心血管死亡的预防。
减少饮酒量可降低血压,呈剂量依赖性,且存在明显的阈值效应。在每天饮用两杯以上饮料的人群中实施有效的酒精干预措施将降低酒精消费和高血压带来的疾病负担,并且在酒精相关风险较大的国家应该优先考虑。
美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)下属的国家酒精滥用和酒精中毒研究所(NIAAA)。