School of Medicine, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
School of Medicine, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
Pancreatology. 2020 Jan;20(1):60-67. doi: 10.1016/j.pan.2019.10.009. Epub 2019 Nov 1.
Tobacco smoking and alcohol consumption are established risk factors for diseases of the pancreas. With the recent advances in imaging modalities (such as magnetic resonance (MR) imaging), opportunities have arisen to study pancreas size, in both health and disease. Studies investigating the relationship between tobacco smoking, alcohol consumption, and total pancreas volume (TPV) - a holistic measure of pancreatic exocrine reserve - are lacking. The aim of the present study was to investigate the associations between MR-derived TPV and tobacco smoking/alcohol consumption.
This cross-sectional study recruited individuals with a history of pancreatitis and healthy controls. A validated questionnaire was used to ascertain current and lifetime tobacco smoking and alcohol consumption. TPV was quantified using MR images by two independent raters. Generalized additive models and linear regression analyses were conducted and adjusted for demographic, metabolic, and pancreatitis-related factors.
A total of 107 individuals following pancreatitis and 38 healthy controls were included. There was no statistically significant difference in TPV between any of the tobacco smoking/alcohol consumption categories of individuals following pancreatitis and healthy controls, in both unadjusted and adjusted analyses. In individuals following pancreatitis, multivariate linear regression found no association between TPV and 7 smoking- and alcohol-related variables. Sensitivity analyses constrained to individuals who did not abstain from either smoking or drinking following their first attack of pancreatitis did not yield statistical significance with TPV. In post-hoc analysis, age was significantly inversely associated with TPV in the most adjusted model (p = 0.016).
This is the first study to investigate the association between tobacco smoking, alcohol consumption, and MR-derived TPV following pancreatitis. It appears that age, but not tobacco smoking or alcohol consumption, is associated with a significantly reduced TPV.
吸烟和饮酒是胰腺疾病的既定危险因素。随着影像学技术(如磁共振成像(MR))的最新进展,为研究健康和疾病状态下的胰腺大小提供了机会。目前缺乏关于吸烟、饮酒与总胰腺体积(TPV)之间关系的研究,TPV 是胰腺外分泌储备的整体衡量指标。本研究旨在探讨 MR 衍生的 TPV 与吸烟/饮酒之间的关联。
本横断面研究招募了有胰腺炎病史的个体和健康对照者。使用经过验证的问卷确定当前和终生的吸烟和饮酒情况。通过两位独立的评估者使用 MR 图像定量 TPV。进行广义加性模型和线性回归分析,并调整了人口统计学、代谢和胰腺炎相关因素。
共纳入 107 名胰腺炎患者和 38 名健康对照者。在未调整和调整分析中,胰腺炎患者中任何吸烟/饮酒类别的 TPV 与健康对照组之间均无统计学差异。在胰腺炎患者中,多元线性回归发现 TPV 与 7 个与吸烟和饮酒相关的变量之间没有关联。对首次胰腺炎发作后未戒烟或戒酒的个体进行敏感性分析,与 TPV 无统计学意义。在事后分析中,在最调整模型中,年龄与 TPV 呈显著负相关(p=0.016)。
这是第一项研究吸烟、饮酒与胰腺炎后 MR 衍生的 TPV 之间关联的研究。似乎是年龄而不是吸烟或饮酒与 TPV 显著降低有关。