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Opinion

Moderate alcohol consumption may decrease HF risk

YOUR DOSE OF MEDICINE - Charles C. Chante MD - The Philippine Star

Although alcohol is known to be a cardiac toxin, consumption of up to seven drinks per week in early to middle age was found to be associated with a decreased risk of future heart failure.

“Although heavy alcohol consumption is associated with impairment in left ventricular function and eventual alcoholic cardiomyopathy with symptomatic HF, moderate alcohol intake could, conversely, lower the risk of HF,” wrote Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston.

“However, the association between moderate alcohol intake and the risk of heart failure is still controversial, as some studies did not find an association and the cardiovascular mechanisms of potential benefit of alcohol consumption in heart failure are uncertain.”

From the ongoing, prospective, observational Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) Study, the investigators analyzed 14,629 subjects aged 45-64 years, 55% of whom were female, and 74% of whom were white. Baseline data for all subjects were taken between 1987 and 1989, and no participants reported prevalent heart failure.

Self-reported alcohol consumption was assessed at baseline as the weekly number of drinks, with one drink equaling 14g of alcohol, and the updated cumulative average alcohol intake was calculated over roughly nine years. Subjects were placed into one of six groups: former drinkers, abstainers, drinkers of fewer than 7 drinks per week, drinkers of 7 -14 drinks per week, drinkers of 14-21 drinks per week, and those who had 21 or more drinks per week. Using multivariable Cox proportional hazards models, investigators analyzed relationships between alcohol consumption and heart failure and whether those associations were affected in any way by the subjects’ sex.

The results showed that 61% of participants reported consuming no alcohol at all – 19% being former drinkers and 42% abstainers – while 25% of participants said they drank up to 7 drinks per week, 8% between 7 and 14 drinks per week, 3% between 14 and 21 drinks per week, and 3% 21 or more ‘drinks per week. Among former drinkers, there were 376 incident heart failure events in men and 266 in women. Among abstainers, there were 333 for men and 717 for women. Rates per 100 person-years equaled 1.50, 1.12, 1.02, and 0.79, respectively.

For subjects who consumed fewer than seven drinks weekly, there were 281 heart failure incidents among men and 191 among women, for rates per 100 person-years of 0.77 and 0.53, respectively, significantly lower than the rates for abstainers. In the higher drinking categories, no significant differences in heart failure rates, compared with abstainers, were observed.

Observed that participants who consumed up to 7 drinks per week of alcohol had a lower risk of incident HF, compared with abstainers, with a less pronounced association in women than in men.

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ABSTAINERS

ACIRC

ALCOHOL

ATHEROSCLEROSIS RISK

BRIGHAM AND WOMEN

DRINKERS

DRINKS

FAILURE

HEART

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WEEK

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