Title | Alcohol consumption and risks of more than 200 diseases in Chinese men |
Authors | Im, Pek Kei Wright, Neil Yang, Ling Chan, Ka Hung Chen, Yiping Guo, Yu Du, Huaidong Yang, Xiaoming Avery, Daniel Wang, Shaojie Yu, Canqing Lv, Jun Clarke, Robert Chen, Junshi Collins, Rory Walters, Robin G. Peto, Richard Li, Liming Chen, Zhengming Millwood, Iona Y. China Kadoorie Biobank Collab Grp |
Affiliation | Univ Oxford, Nuffield Dept Populat Hlth, Clin Trial Serv Unit, Epidemiol Studies Unit CTSU, Oxford, England Univ Oxford, Populat Hlth Res Unit MRC PHRU, Nuffield Dept Populat Hlth, MRC, Oxford, England Univ Oxford, Oxford British Heart Fdn Ctr Res Excellence, Oxford, England Chinese Acad Med Sci, Fuwai Hosp, Beijing, Peoples R China Qingdao CDC, NCD Prevent & Control Dept, Qingdao, Peoples R China Peking Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol & Biostat, Beijing, Peoples R China Peking Univ Ctr Publ Hlth & Epidem Preparedness &, Beijing, Peoples R China China Natl Ctr Food Safety Risk Assessment, Beijing, Peoples R China |
Keywords | FALSE DISCOVERY RATE 0.5 MILLION PEOPLE RECURRENT EVENTS REGRESSION DILUTION BLOOD-PRESSURE CANCER ASSOCIATIONS SMOKING BURDEN HEALTH |
Issue Date | 2023 |
Publisher | NATURE MEDICINE |
Abstract | Alcohol consumption accounts for similar to 3 million annual deaths worldwide, but uncertainty persists about its relationships with many diseases. We investigated the associations of alcohol consumption with 207 diseases in the 12-year China Kadoorie Biobank of >512,000 adults (41% men), including 168,050 genotyped for ALDH2- and ADH1B-, with >1.1 million ICD-10 coded hospitalized events. At baseline, 33% of men drank alcohol regularly. Among men, alcohol intake was positively associated with 61 diseases, including 33 not defined by the World Health Organization as alcohol-related, such as cataract (n = 2,028; hazard ratio 1.21; 95% confidence interval 1.09-1.33, per 280 g per week) and gout (n = 402; 1.57, 1.33-1.86). Genotype-predicted mean alcohol intake was positively associated with established (n = 28,564; 1.14, 1.09-1.20) and new alcohol-associated (n = 16,138; 1.06, 1.01-1.12) diseases, and with specific diseases such as liver cirrhosis (n = 499; 2.30, 1.58-3.35), stroke (n = 12,176; 1.38, 1.27-1.49) and gout (n = 338; 2.33, 1.49-3.62), but not ischemic heart disease (n = 8,408; 1.04, 0.94-1.14). Among women, 2% drank alcohol resulting in low power to assess associations of self-reported alcohol intake with disease risks, but genetic findings in women suggested the excess male risks were not due to pleiotropic genotypic effects. Among Chinese men, alcohol consumption increased multiple disease risks, highlighting the need to strengthen preventive measures to reduce alcohol intake. |
URI | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11897/687198 |
ISSN | 1078-8956 |
DOI | 10.1038/s41591-023-02383-8 |
Indexed | SCI(E) |
Appears in Collections: | 公共卫生学院 |