Heavy Drinking Episodes and Heart Disease Risk
Background: The relationship between average alcohol consumption and heart disease is well researched, showing a substantial cardioprotective association. This dissertation examined the epidemiological evidence for an effect of heavy episodic drinking (HED) over and above the effect of average alco...
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ndltd-TORONTO-oai-tspace.library.utoronto.ca-1807-351902013-04-19T19:58:47ZHeavy Drinking Episodes and Heart Disease RiskRoerecke, Michaelalcohol drinkingheart diseaseheavy episodic drinkingmeta-analysis0766Background: The relationship between average alcohol consumption and heart disease is well researched, showing a substantial cardioprotective association. This dissertation examined the epidemiological evidence for an effect of heavy episodic drinking (HED) over and above the effect of average alcohol consumption on heart disease. Methods: Electronic databases were systematically searched for epidemiological studies on the effect of HED on heart disease and identified articles were quantitatively summarized in a meta-analysis. Meta-regression models were used to examine the effect of characteristics of primary studies. Using individual-level data, semi-parametric Cox regression models were used to investigate HED exposure within narrow categories of average alcohol consumption in a US national population sample (n = 9,937) in relation to heart disease mortality in an 11-22 year follow-up. Frequency of heavy drinking episodes was used to identify latent classes of drinking history using growth mixture modeling in a sub-sample of this US cohort. Retrieved classes were used as independent variables in Cox regression models with heart disease mortality as the outcome event. Results: A pooled relative risk of 1.45 (95% confidence interval (CI): 1.24-1.70) for HED compared with non-HED drinkers with average alcohol consumption between 0.1-60 g/day was derived in a meta-analysis. A strong and consistent association with HED was found among current drinkers consuming an average of 1-2 drinks per day in the US cohort. There was no evidence of increased heart disease mortality resulting from the frequency of heavy drinking episodes before the age of forty. Conclusions: There is reasonable and consistent evidence for an association of HED and heart disease in current drinkers, negating any beneficial effect from alcohol consumption on heart health. History of frequency of heavy drinking episodes, however, showed no evidence for such an effect modification.Rehm, Jürgen2013-032013-03-20T14:08:59ZNO_RESTRICTION2013-03-20T14:08:59Z2013-03-20Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/35190en_ca |
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alcohol drinking heart disease heavy episodic drinking meta-analysis 0766 |
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alcohol drinking heart disease heavy episodic drinking meta-analysis 0766 Roerecke, Michael Heavy Drinking Episodes and Heart Disease Risk |
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Background: The relationship between average alcohol consumption and heart disease is well researched, showing a substantial cardioprotective association. This dissertation examined the epidemiological evidence for an effect of heavy episodic drinking (HED) over and above the effect of average alcohol consumption on heart disease.
Methods: Electronic databases were systematically searched for epidemiological studies on the effect of HED on heart disease and identified articles were quantitatively summarized in a meta-analysis. Meta-regression models were used to examine the effect of characteristics of primary studies. Using individual-level data, semi-parametric Cox regression models were used to investigate HED exposure within narrow categories of average alcohol consumption in a US national population sample (n = 9,937) in relation to heart disease mortality in an 11-22 year follow-up. Frequency of heavy drinking episodes was used to identify latent classes of drinking history using growth mixture modeling in a sub-sample of this US cohort. Retrieved classes were used as independent variables in Cox regression models with heart disease mortality as the outcome event.
Results: A pooled relative risk of 1.45 (95% confidence interval (CI): 1.24-1.70) for HED compared with non-HED drinkers with average alcohol consumption between 0.1-60 g/day was derived in a meta-analysis. A strong and consistent association with HED was found among current drinkers consuming an average of 1-2 drinks per day in the US cohort. There was no evidence of increased heart disease mortality resulting from the frequency of heavy drinking episodes before the age of forty.
Conclusions: There is reasonable and consistent evidence for an association of HED and heart disease in current drinkers, negating any beneficial effect from alcohol consumption on heart health. History of frequency of heavy drinking episodes, however, showed no evidence for such an effect modification. |
author2 |
Rehm, Jürgen |
author_facet |
Rehm, Jürgen Roerecke, Michael |
author |
Roerecke, Michael |
author_sort |
Roerecke, Michael |
title |
Heavy Drinking Episodes and Heart Disease Risk |
title_short |
Heavy Drinking Episodes and Heart Disease Risk |
title_full |
Heavy Drinking Episodes and Heart Disease Risk |
title_fullStr |
Heavy Drinking Episodes and Heart Disease Risk |
title_full_unstemmed |
Heavy Drinking Episodes and Heart Disease Risk |
title_sort |
heavy drinking episodes and heart disease risk |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/1807/35190 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT roereckemichael heavydrinkingepisodesandheartdiseaserisk |
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