1 Alcohol and Tobacco Research Unit, Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
2 Division of Biostatistics, School of Public Health, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN.
3 Kentucky School of Public Health, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY.
4 Manitoba Centre for Health Policy and Evaluation, Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
5 Section of Cardiology, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
6 School of Child and Youth Care, University of Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.
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ABSTRACT |
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alcohol drinking; alcoholic intoxication; cardiovascular diseases; morbidity; mortality
Abbreviations: HR, hazard ratio; ICD-9-CM, International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Adults' risk of coronary heart disease (usually reported as mortality) in relation to volume of alcohol consumed is described as U- or J-shaped. In fact, in industrialized countries where coronary heart disease is prevalent, all-cause mortality is also U- or J-shaped (10). Reduced risk is associated with moderate drinking, and increased risk is associated with both abstention and heavy drinking, although the latter effect is somewhat less reliably demonstrated.
Volume of alcohol consumption in epidemiologic studies is almost universally based on self-reports of the usual number of occasions on which participants drank in the past week or month and the usual number of drinks they consumed per occasion (11). The total number of drinks or total volume of ethanol consumed is then calculated from these estimates of quantity and frequency.
In addition to the volume of alcohol consumed, sociologists and anthropologists have long recognized the social importance of pattern of drinking (12). A binge pattern of drinking, in North America at least, has traditionally been measured in surveys by asking about the number of times during the past year that the respondent has consumed five or more (or eight or more) drinks at one sitting (11
).
There has recently been an increasing interest in patterns of drinking and their health consequences (6, 13
, 14
). The health effects of a binge pattern of drinking have not been widely investigated using population-based studies, largely because questions on drinking pattern are not yet commonly included in epidemiologic surveys (15
). Suggestive evidence comes from studies that examine the high end of the range of responses to questions on quantity and frequency (16
18
), from international comparisons of drinking and its health consequences between countries where binge drinking is common and countries where it is not (19
), and from studies that use self-reported illness burden as an outcome measure (20
, 21
). A recent study linked volume and pattern of drinking to mortality outcomes but failed to show the effects of pattern across all levels of volume (22
).
The present study linked health care utilization data to data on alcohol consumption in Manitoba, Canada. Manitoba is a jurisdiction where the cost of all medical and hospital care, with minor exceptions, is covered by a government health care plan (23). Anonymized administrative data are contained in the Population Health Research Data Repository. The repository was developed by the Manitoba Centre for Health Policy and Evaluation, a research organization that routinely receives, extracts, and analyzes such data through an arrangement with the provincial government (24
, 25
).
The primary objective of this study was to assess the protective cardiovascular effects of increasing volumes of usual drinking by gender and to separate these from the deleterious effects of binge drinking. Data on alcohol consumption were obtained from the Winnipeg Health and Drinking Survey, a study of a community sample of adults drawn from Winnipeg, Manitoba, and followed for 8 years. An unusual aspect of these data is that they include information from a specific question about binge drinkingthe frequency of consumption of eight or more drinks per occasion.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Measures
Volume of drinking was assessed by asking each respondent about the number of occasions in the past 12 months on which he or she had usually consumed drinks containing alcohol and how many drinks were usually consumed on those occasions. Both of these questions were asked separately for wine, beer, and liquor. For example, the questions for beer were "How often do you usually have beer?" and "Now, think of all the times you have had beer recently. When you drink beer, how many glasses do you usually have?". The responses were converted to average grams of ethanol per day by multiplying frequency and quantity together and by assuming that a 12-ounce (355-ml) can or bottle of beer contained 13.2 g of ethanol, that a standard drink of liquor contained 15.1 g of ethanol, and that a 4-ounce (118-ml) glass of wine contained 10.8 g of ethanol (28). With these conversion values, a standard drink is considered to contain approximately 13 g of ethanol. Volume of drinking is referred to as "usual drinking" in this paper, since that is how the questions were phrased, and to distinguish it from binge drinking.
The frequency distribution of drinking (in grams of ethanol) from 0.65 g and up was divided into tertiles which were calculated separately for men and women. Among men, these corresponded to 0.655.77 g of ethanol per day for the lowest tertile and rose to 5.7818.1 g and >18.1 g for the two higher tertiles. Among women, the tertiles for average volume of ethanol consumed daily were 0.652.92 g, 2.939.15 g, and >9.15 g.
Binge drinking was measured by asking the respondent, with regard to wine, beer, and liquor, how often he or she had consumed eight or more drinks at one sitting in the past 12 months. Responses were summed together for reports of wine, beer, and liquor and were expressed as the number of times per month that a respondent reported consuming eight or more drinks at one sitting. In the proportional hazards models described below, indicator variables for both usual drinking and binge drinking were included. The continuous covariate (frequency of binge drinking per month) accounted for more variance in the women's models, whereas a dichotomous version (any occurrence of binge drinking) accounted for more variance among men.
Physician visits and hospital stays with diagnoses of coronary heart disease, hypertension, and other cardiovascular disease within the 8-year period following the first interview were identified using International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) codes (coronary heart disease: codes 410414; hypertension: codes 401405; other cardiovascular disease: codes 390398 and 415459). Cause-of-death data (ICD-9-CM diagnoses) over the 8-year follow-up period were extracted from vital statistics files for each of the three categories of diseases. We used the "most responsible diagnosis," coded to five digits, from the hospital discharge abstract data. Only one diagnosis, coded to three digits, was available from the physician claims data. Although the motivation of physicians to provide coded claims is high because payment for services is dependent on submission of claims, Manitoba hospital claims data tend to be of higher quality than physician claims data (29).
Statistical methods
Cox proportional hazards regression methods were used to assess time-to-event data in models stratified by gender, with no weighting for age (30). Time to event was defined as the number of days from the individual's wave 1 interview to the first reporting of the index diagnosis. The proportional hazards assumption was tested by examining the interaction of an alcohol covariate with log(time) in the model and by the examination of weighted Schoenfeld residuals (31
, 32
). Examination of residuals in the men's coronary heart disease model identified two binge outliers; removal of the outliers did not lead to any different inferences. For the women's cardiovascular disease model, one binge outlier was removed.
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RESULTS |
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In men, all levels of usual drinking above the reference category significantly reduced the risk of other cardiovascular disease (table 2). The middle tertile of alcohol consumption was significantly protective (HR = 0.48) against other cardiovascular disease in women (table 3). Binge drinking was not a significant predictor of other cardiovascular disease in men or women.
All models were adjusted for age, educational level, marital status, and cigarette smoking status. Age was a significant covariate in all models, and no other covariates were significant in any model. All models were also tested with inclusion of the interactions between levels of usual drinking and binge drinking. Results were not significant in any model.
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DISCUSSION |
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In our study, questioning people separately about usual drinking and binge-pattern drinking appears to have disaggregated the protective and hazardous effects of alcohol relatively well. The effects of usual drinking among both men and women, when statistically significant, were uniformly protective. The effects of binge-pattern drinking, when statistically significant, were uniformly hazardous. The drinking pattern questions that have worked well historically to identify social harms appear also to work well when applied to illness and mortality outcomes.
Usual drinking appeared to be protective at all levels in our data. This finding, however, must be interpreted with some explicit cautions. Our inclusion of morbidity as an outcome provided significant results in multivariate analyses, but we cannot assume that a study which is predominantly a study of morbidity is equivalent to a study of mortality. Because we divided the distribution of drinking into tertiles, our heavier level of alcohol consumption (>18.1 g for men) included a quantity of alcohol that is close to the optimum protective level in studies of coronary heart disease (2025 g) (34). Did the "heavy among the heavier" drinkers in this study exhibit harm from alcohol? There is no indication of it, but a larger study is needed to address this question directly.
The use of hypertension as an outcome in this study was chosen after we reviewed initial analyses divided between coronary heart disease and cardiovascular disease. We found that hypertension was the largest single category of cardiovascular disease events reported in physician offices. We then decided to examine hypertension as a surrogate for more advanced cardiovascular disease and found that it too was suggestively linked to pattern of alcohol use.
In looking for a relation between drinking patterns and health, we linked documented episodes of medical care over an 8-year period to baseline drinking estimates derived from questions on usual drinking and binge drinking. We found significant results for coronary heart disease, hypertension, and other cardiovascular disease. Among men, we found a protective effect for coronary heart disease beginning at about 1.5 drinks per day and a detrimental effect with any report of eight or more drinks per occasion. Among women, we found only a risk linked to the frequency of reported binge drinking. Among binge-drinking men, there was evidence of a risk for hypertension. There was a similar number of hypertension events (that is, diagnoses) among women and evidence of a protective effect of usual drinking, but no evidence of an increased risk with binge drinking. Among men, there was a uniformly protective effect for other cardiovascular disease across the drinking range, but no effect for binge drinking. Among women, there was a protective effect against other cardiovascular disease at levels of approximately half a drink per day.
These effects were found primarily with regard to cardiovascular disease morbidity, not cardiovascular disease mortality, which is the usual outcome in these types of studies. The focus on morbidity provided a much greater number of events for a given sample size and thus greater statistical power than would have been achieved in a study of mortality alone. It also provided a different mix of endpoints for different diagnoses. In addition, by examining physician visits and hospital admissions, we were able to obtain unique information regarding endpoints. For example, acute myocardial infarction may be associated with a hospital admission and several physician visits. The management of hypertension, on the other hand, is associated with many physician office visits and infrequent hospitalization. When looking in the aggregate at the first occurrence of events, this difference is represented by more observations of hypertensive events than of coronary heart disease events. One consequence of this difference is the apparently greater power of the hypertension and other cardiovascular disease analyses compared with the coronary heart disease analysis. In our results, the protective effect of usual alcohol use against coronary heart disease was seen only among men, and only with the use of more than 18.1 g of alcohol per day. The protective effect for cardiovascular disease other than coronary heart disease and hypertension was observed for men at all levels of usual alcohol consumption. Thus, in men, the protective effect occurred at all levels of usual alcohol use for other cardiovascular disease and at the high end only for coronary heart disease. These different results may in fact represent different protective mechanisms in the two clusters of diseases. However, they have not been seen in studies of mortality, and it is possible that here they resulted from differences in the power of the models. It has been suggested that a particularly hazardous pattern of drinking is heavy episodic drinking among individuals who have modest levels of usual drinking (35), but this was not supported by our data.
Puddey et al. (8) reviewed mechanisms that plausibly underlie drinking-pattern effects such as those demonstrated here. They reported on several studies in which usual drinking at binge levels was identified and found an associated increased risk of major coronary heart disease events. Our binge drinking questions were based on a different approach to measurement but delivered comparable results. Puddey et al. cited several studies supporting the relation between heavy episodic drinking and hypertension, although this finding was not universal. This lends at least some support to our finding of an increased risk of hypertension among binge-drinking men.
This study had some clear limitations. Because the sample was relatively small, tertiles of alcohol consumption within gender were used in place of finer categorizations that could distinguish more extreme levels of alcohol use. Among men, baseline pattern of binge drinking was categorized as a dichotomous variable rather than at the several levels of frequency that were available. On the other hand, we had approximately equal samples of women and men, which allowed for separate and corresponding models for each gender. We defined binge drinking as consuming eight or more drinks at one sitting; a lower number of drinks, perhaps five, may have been more appropriate for women.
Other limitations were related to the available variables. The baseline survey did not include measures of diet, blood lipid levels, body mass index, or exerciseall factors that have been found to be important in predicting coronary heart disease, hypertension, and other cardiovascular disease.
These results, if replicated, have implications for the manner in which the effects of alcohol consumption are communicated to the public. They suggest that usual alcohol consumption at almost any level may be cardioprotective. This protective effect begins at quite low levels, as is commonly known. The higher levels are also cardioprotective but introduce known risks for other diseases such as cancer and liver disease. Most important in these results is the evidence that binge drinking, possibly even at relatively infrequent intervals, presents a significant risk for coronary heart disease and hypertension.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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The authors acknowledge the assistance of the St. Boniface General Hospital Research Centre (Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada). The authors are indebted to Health Information Services, Manitoba Health, and the Office of Vital Statistics in the Agency of Consumer and Corporate Affairs for the provision of data.
An earlier version of this paper was presented at the 26th Annual Alcohol Epidemiology Symposium of the Kettil Bruun Society in Oslo, Norway, June 2000.
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NOTES |
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REFERENCES |
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