Nakazawa Shoko, Furuya Yuko, Sakai Kosuke, Fukai Kota, Sano Kei, Hoshi Keika, Kojimahara Noriko, Toyota Akihiro, Korenaga Masaaki, Tatemichi Masayuki
Department of Preventive Medicine, Tokai University School of Medicine, Isehara, Japan.
Department of Ophthalmology, The Jikei University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
BMC Public Health. 2025 Apr 17;25(1):1445. doi: 10.1186/s12889-025-22715-2.
This study aimed to identify the occupational class and specific occupations associated with hospitalisations due to alcohol-related liver disease and alcoholic liver cirrhosis, based on the distribution of alcohol consumption.
This matched case-control study used a nationwide, multicentre, inpatient dataset from the Inpatient Clinico-Occupational Database of the Rosai Hospital Group in Japan. A total of 5,490 cases with alcohol-related liver disease and 10,961 controls were included in this study. Participants were categorised according to occupational class (blue-collar, service, professional, and manager) and industrial sector (blue-collar, service, and white-collar). Professionals in white-collar industries were set as the reference group. We calculated the odds ratios (ORs) and confidence intervals (CIs) of alcohol-related liver disease and alcoholic liver cirrhosis using conditional logistic regression models.
Blue-collar workers and service workers in both the service and blue-collar industries had a higher risk of hospitalisations due to alcohol-related liver disease: The ORs (95% CIs) for alcohol-related liver disease were 1.33 (1.15-1.55) for blue-collar workers in the blue-collar industry, 1.21 (1.03-1.42) for service workers in the blue-collar industry, 1.23 (1.01-1.51) for blue-collar workers in the service industry, and 1.47 (1.25-1.72) for service workers in the service industry. Among service workers, food and drink preparatory workers and customer service workers had a higher risk of hospitalisations due to alcohol-related liver disease and alcoholic liver cirrhosis compared to professionals (reference group), with ORs of 2.28 (1.81-2.89) and 2.18 (1.64-2.89), respectively, for alcohol-related liver disease. Among blue-collar workers, skeleton construction workers had a higher risk of hospitalisations due to alcohol-related liver disease, with an OR of 2.31 (1.63-3.3). Workers in occupations with a high risk of hospitalisations due to alcohol-related liver disease had higher percentages of alcohol consumption compared to professionals.
Occupational class and specific jobs were associated with the risk of hospitalisations due to alcohol-related liver disease and alcoholic liver cirrhosis, with alcohol consumption patterns contributing to this increased risk.
本研究旨在根据酒精消费分布情况,确定与酒精性肝病和酒精性肝硬化住院相关的职业类别和具体职业。
这项配对病例对照研究使用了日本罗赛医院集团住院临床职业数据库中的全国性多中心住院患者数据集。本研究共纳入5490例酒精性肝病患者和10961例对照。参与者根据职业类别(蓝领、服务业、专业人员和管理人员)和产业部门(蓝领、服务业和白领)进行分类。白领行业的专业人员被设为参照组。我们使用条件逻辑回归模型计算了酒精性肝病和酒精性肝硬化的比值比(OR)和置信区间(CI)。
蓝领行业的蓝领工人和服务业的服务业工人因酒精性肝病住院的风险较高:蓝领行业蓝领工人酒精性肝病的OR(95%CI)为1.33(1.15 - 1.55),蓝领行业服务业工人为1.21(1.03 - 1.42),服务业蓝领工人为1.23(1.01 - 1.51),服务业服务业工人为1.47(1.25 - 1.72)。在服务业工人中,与专业人员(参照组)相比,食品和饮料制备工人以及客户服务工人因酒精性肝病和酒精性肝硬化住院的风险较高,酒精性肝病的OR分别为2.28(1.81 - 2.89)和2.18(1.64 - 2.89)。在蓝领工人中,骨架建筑工人因酒精性肝病住院的风险较高,OR为2.31(1.63 - 3.3)。与专业人员相比,因酒精性肝病住院风险高的职业的工人酒精消费百分比更高。
职业类别和具体工作与酒精性肝病和酒精性肝硬化住院风险相关,酒精消费模式导致了这种风险增加。