Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri.
VA Eastern Kansas Health Care System, Leavenworth, Kansas.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2018 Nov;42(11):2246-2255. doi: 10.1111/acer.13886. Epub 2018 Oct 3.
There is evidence that low-level alcohol use, drinking 1 to 2 drinks on occasion, is protective for cardiovascular disease, but increases the risk of cancer. Synthesizing the overall impact of low-level alcohol use on health is therefore complex. The objective of this paper was to examine the association between frequency of low-level drinking and mortality.
Two data sets with self-reported alcohol use and mortality follow-up were analyzed: 340,668 individuals from the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) and 93,653 individuals from the Veterans Health Administration (VA) outpatient medical records. Survival analyses were conducted to evaluate the association between low-level drinking frequency and mortality.
The minimum risk drinking frequency among those who drink 1 to 2 drinks per occasion was found to be 3.2 times weekly in the NHIS data, based on a continuous measure of drinking frequency, and 2 to 3 times weekly in the VA data. Relative to these individuals with minimum risk, individuals who drink 7 times weekly had an adjusted hazard ratio (HR) of all-cause mortality of 1.23 (p < 0.0001) in the NHIS data, and individuals who drink 4 to 7 times weekly in the VA data also had an adjusted HR of 1.23 (p = 0.01). Secondary analyses in the NHIS data showed that the minimum risk was drinking 4 times weekly for cardiovascular mortality, and drinking monthly or less for cancer mortality. The associations were consistent in stratified analyses of men, women, and never smokers.
The minimum risk of low-level drinking frequency for all-cause mortality appears to be approximately 3 occasions weekly. The robustness of this finding is highlighted in 2 distinctly different data sets: a large epidemiological data set and a data set of veterans sampled from an outpatient clinic. Daily drinking, even at low levels, is detrimental to one's health.
有证据表明,低水平饮酒,偶尔喝 1-2 杯,对心血管疾病有保护作用,但会增加癌症风险。因此,综合低水平饮酒对健康的整体影响是复杂的。本文的目的是研究低水平饮酒频率与死亡率之间的关系。
分析了两个具有自我报告饮酒和死亡率随访的数据集:来自国家健康访谈调查(NHIS)的 340668 人和来自退伍军人健康管理局(VA)门诊医疗记录的 93653 人。进行生存分析以评估低水平饮酒频率与死亡率之间的关系。
根据饮酒频率的连续测量,在 NHIS 数据中,最低风险饮酒频率为每周 3.2 次,在 VA 数据中为每周 2-3 次。与这些具有最低风险的人相比,每周饮酒 7 次的人在 NHIS 数据中的全因死亡率调整后的危险比(HR)为 1.23(p<0.0001),每周饮酒 4-7 次的人在 VA 数据中的 HR 也为 1.23(p=0.01)。在 NHIS 数据中的二次分析显示,心血管死亡率的最低风险是每周饮酒 4 次,癌症死亡率的最低风险是每月或更少饮酒。在男性、女性和从不吸烟者的分层分析中,这些关联是一致的。
低水平饮酒频率的最低风险似乎约为每周 3 次。这一发现的稳健性在两个截然不同的数据集中得到了强调:一个是大型流行病学数据集,另一个是从门诊诊所抽取的退伍军人数据集。即使是低水平的每日饮酒也对健康有害。