Health Services Research & Development (HSR&D), Center of Innovation for Veteran-Centered Value-Driven Care, Veterans Affairs (VA) Puget Sound Health Care System; Seattle, WA (ECW, CLB, HS, DHA, KAB); Department of Health Services, University of Washington, Seattle, WA (ECW, CLB, DHA, KAB); Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, WA (KAB); Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute, Seattle, WA (KAB).
J Addict Med. 2018 Mar/Apr;12(2):143-149. doi: 10.1097/ADM.0000000000000379.
Alcohol use is associated with angina incidence, but associations between alcohol use and experience of angina among patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) have not been described.
Outpatients with CAD from 7 clinics in the Veterans Health Administration were surveyed; alcohol use was measured using the validated Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test-Consumption scores categorized into 6 groups: nondrinking, low-risk drinking, and mild, moderate, severe, and very severe unhealthy alcohol use. Three domains of self-reported angina symptoms (frequency, stability, and physical function) were measured with the Seattle Angina Questionnaire. Linear regression models evaluated associations between alcohol use groups and angina symptoms. Models were adjusted first for age and then additionally for smoking, comorbidities, and depression.
Patients (n = 8303) had a mean age of 66 years. In age-adjusted analyses, a U-shaped association was observed between alcohol use groups and all angina outcomes, with patients in nondrinking and severe unhealthy alcohol groups reporting the greatest angina symptoms and lowest functioning. After full adjustment, no clinically important and few statistically important differences were observed across alcohol use in angina stability or frequency. Patients in the nondrinking group had statistically greater functional limitation from angina than those in all groups of unhealthy alcohol use, though differences were small. Patients in all groups of unhealthy alcohol use did not differ significantly from those with low-risk drinking.
Alcohol use was associated with some small statistically but no clinically important differences in angina symptoms among patients with CAD. This cross-sectional study does not support a protective effect of low-level drinking on self-reported angina.
饮酒与心绞痛的发生有关,但冠心病(CAD)患者的饮酒与心绞痛经历之间的关系尚未描述。
对退伍军人管理局(Veterans Health Administration)7 家诊所的 CAD 门诊患者进行了调查;使用经过验证的酒精使用障碍识别测试-消费评分来衡量饮酒情况,该评分分为 6 组:不饮酒、低风险饮酒以及轻度、中度、重度和非常重度的不健康饮酒。使用西雅图心绞痛问卷(Seattle Angina Questionnaire)测量了 3 个自我报告的心绞痛症状(频率、稳定性和身体功能)领域。线性回归模型评估了饮酒组与心绞痛症状之间的关联。首先调整了年龄模型,然后进一步调整了吸烟、合并症和抑郁情况。
患者(n = 8303)的平均年龄为 66 岁。在年龄调整分析中,观察到饮酒组与所有心绞痛结局之间呈 U 形关联,不饮酒和重度不健康饮酒组的患者报告的心绞痛症状最严重,功能最低。在充分调整后,在心绞痛稳定性或频率方面,饮酒与不健康饮酒之间没有观察到临床上重要的和很少有统计学意义的差异。与所有不健康饮酒组相比,不饮酒组的患者心绞痛引起的功能受限在统计学上更大,尽管差异较小。所有不健康饮酒组的患者与低风险饮酒组没有显著差异。
在 CAD 患者中,饮酒与心绞痛症状存在一些小的统计学差异,但无临床意义。这项横断面研究不支持低水平饮酒对自述心绞痛有保护作用。