The Welch Center for Prevention Epidemiology and Clinical Research, Baltimore, Maryland.
Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2020 Aug;44(8):1646-1657. doi: 10.1111/acer.14393. Epub 2020 Jul 1.
Public health recommendations on the benefits and harms of moderate alcohol intake require a thorough and unbiased understanding of all potential effects of various levels and patterns of alcohol consumption. We seek to evaluate the associations between patterns of current and past alcohol consumption with hospitalizations and mortality.
Data came from a prospective cohort of 12,327 adults (56% women, 78% white, mean age 60 years) participating in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities study visit 3 (1993 to 1995). Current and past alcohol consumption was based on self-report. Hospitalizations and mortality were ascertained through December 31, 2017. Negative binomial and Cox proportional hazards regressions were used.
24.8% of the study population reported never drinking, 48.3% reported currently drinking without a history of heavy drinking, 4.2% reported currently drinking with a history of heavy drinking, 19.2% reported being former drinkers without a history of heavy drinking, and 3.4% reported being former drinkers with a history of heavy drinking. Compared to those who reported drinking ≤1 to 7 drinks/wk, never drinkers (incident rate ratio [IRR]: 1.21 (95% confidence interval 1.13, 1.29) and former drinkers with (IRR: 1.43 [1.26, 1.63]) or without (IRR: 1.21 [1.13, 1.30]) a history of heavy drinking had a positive association with all-cause hospitalization (p < 0.001). Those who reported drinking ≤1 to 7 drinks/wk had the lowest all-cause mortality rate (19.2 per 1,000 person-years [18.4, 20.1]) and former drinkers with a history of heavy drinking had the highest (43.7 per 1,000 person-years [39.0, 49.1]).
The positive associations with hospitalization and mortality were stronger among never and former drinkers compared to those who consume ≤1 to 7 drinks/wk. Former drinkers with a history of heavy drinking had a stronger positive association with adverse health outcomes than former drinkers without a history of heavy drinking, highlighting the impact of this pattern of alcohol consumption.
公共卫生部门关于适量饮酒的益处和危害的建议,需要对各种饮酒水平和模式的所有潜在影响进行彻底和客观的理解。我们旨在评估当前和过去饮酒模式与住院和死亡之间的关联。
数据来自于参加动脉粥样硬化风险社区研究(Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities study)第 3 次访问(1993 年至 1995 年)的 12327 名成年人的前瞻性队列研究(56%为女性,78%为白人,平均年龄为 60 岁)。当前和过去的饮酒情况基于自我报告。通过截至 2017 年 12 月 31 日的住院和死亡率确定。使用负二项式和 Cox 比例风险回归。
研究人群中 24.8%的人报告从未饮酒,48.3%的人报告目前不饮酒但过去有过重度饮酒史,4.2%的人报告目前有饮酒且过去有过重度饮酒史,19.2%的人报告过去曾饮酒但没有重度饮酒史,3.4%的人报告过去曾饮酒且有重度饮酒史。与每周饮酒≤1-7 杯的人相比,从不饮酒者(发生率比[IRR]:1.21(95%置信区间 1.13,1.29)和过去饮酒者且有(IRR:1.43 [1.26,1.63])或没有(IRR:1.21 [1.13,1.30])重度饮酒史与全因住院率呈正相关(p<0.001)。每周饮酒≤1-7 杯的人全因死亡率最低(19.2 人/1000 人年[18.4,20.1]),过去有重度饮酒史的饮酒者最高(43.7 人/1000 人年[39.0,49.1])。
与每周饮酒≤1-7 杯的人相比,从不饮酒者和过去饮酒者与住院和死亡的正相关性更强。与过去没有重度饮酒史的饮酒者相比,过去有重度饮酒史的饮酒者与不良健康结局的正相关性更强,这突出了这种饮酒模式的影响。