| Literature DB >> 24881324 |
Kevin D Shield, Charles Parry, Jürgen Rehm.
Abstract
Alcohol consumption is a risk factor for many chronic diseases and conditions. The average volume of alcohol consumed, consumption patterns, and quality of the alcoholic beverages consumed likely have a causal impact on the mortality and morbidity related to chronic diseases and conditions. Twenty-five chronic disease and condition codes in the International Classification of Disease (ICD)-10 are entirely attributable to alcohol, and alcohol plays a component-risk role in certain cancers, other tumors, neuropsychiatric conditions, and numerous cardiovascular and digestive diseases. Furthermore, alcohol has both beneficial and detrimental impacts on diabetes, ischemic stroke, and ischemic heart disease, depending on the overall volume of alcohol consumed, and, in the case of ischemic diseases, consumption patterns. However, limitations exist to the methods used to calculate the relative risks and alcohol-attributable fractions. Furthermore, new studies and confounders may lead to additional diseases being causally linked to alcohol consumption, or may disprove the relationship between alcohol consumption and certain diseases that currently are considered to be causally linked. These limitations do not affect the conclusion that alcohol consumption significantly contributes to the burden of chronic diseases and conditions globally, and that this burden should be a target for intervention.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24881324 PMCID: PMC3908707
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Alcohol Res ISSN: 2168-3492
Figure 1Causal model of alcohol consumption, intermediate mechanisms, and long-term consequences, as well as of the influence of societal and demographic factors on alcohol consumption and alcohol-related harms resulting in chronic diseases and conditions.
SOURCE: Adapted from Rehm et al. 2010.
Chronic Diseases and Conditions That Are, by Definition, Alcohol Attributable (i.e., Require Alcohol Consumption As a Necessary Cause)
| F10 | Mental and behavioral disorders attributed to the use of alcohol |
| F10.0 | Acute intoxication |
| F10.1 | Harmful use |
| F10.2 | Dependence syndrome |
| F10.3 | Withdrawal state |
| F10.4 | Withdrawal state with delirium |
| F10.5 | Psychotic disorder |
| F10.6 | Amnesic syndrome |
| F10.7 | Residual and late-onset psychotic disorder |
| F10.8 | Other mental and behavioral disorders |
| F10.9 | Unspecified mental and behavioral disorder |
| G31.2 | Degeneration of nervous system attributed to alcohol |
| G62.1 | Alcoholic polyneuropathy |
| G72.1 | Alcoholic myopathy |
| I42.6 | Alcoholic cardiomyopathy |
| K29.2 | Alcoholic gastritis |
| K70 | Alcoholic liver disease |
| K70.0 | Alcoholic fatty liver |
| K70.1 | Alcoholic hepatitis |
| K70.2 | Alcoholic fibrosis and sclerosis of liver |
| K70.3 | Alcoholic cirrhosis of liver |
| K70.4 | Alcoholic hepatic failure |
| K70.9 | Alcoholic liver disease, unspecified |
| K85.2 | Alcohol-induced acute pancreatitis |
| K86.0 | Alcohol-induced chronic pancreatitis |
| P04.3 | Fetus and newborn affected by maternal use of alcohol |
| Q86.0 | Fetal alcohol syndrome (dysmorphic) |
Chronic Diseases and Conditions for Which Alcohol Consumption Is a Component Cause, Identified by Various Meta-Analyses and Reviews and Listed in the 2005 Global Burden of Disease (GBD) Study
| IIA1 | Mouth cancer | C00–C08 | Detrimental | Causally related | |
| IIA2 | Nasopharynx cancer and other pharynx cancers | C09–C13 | Detrimental | Causally related | |
| IIA3 | Esophagus cancer | C15 | Detrimental | Causally related | |
| IIA4 | Stomach cancer | C16 | Detrimental | Insufficient causal evidence | |
| IIA5 | Colon and rectum cancers | C18–C21 | Detrimental | Causally related | |
| IIA6 | Liver cancer | C22 | Detrimental | Causally related | |
| IIA9 | Larynx cancer | C32 | Detrimental | Causally related | |
| IIA10 | Trachea, bronchus, and lung cancers | C33–C34 | Detrimental | Insufficient causal evidence | |
| IIA13 | Breast cancer (women only) | C50 | Detrimental | Causally related | |
| IIA16 | Ovarian cancer | C56 | Detrimental | Insufficient causal evidence | |
| IIA17 | Prostate cancer | C61 | Detrimental | Insufficient causal evidence | |
| IIA19 | Kidney and other urinary organ cancers | C64–C66, C68 (except C68.9) | Beneficial (renal cell carcinoma only) | Insufficient causal evidence | |
| IIA23 | Hodgkins lymphoma | C81 | Beneficial | Insufficient causal evidence | |
| IIA24 | Non-Hodgkins lymphoma | C82–C85, C96 | Beneficial | Insufficient causal evidence | |
| D00–D48 (except D09.9, D37.9, D38.6, D39.9, D40.9, D41.9, 48.9) | Detrimental | ||||
| E10–E13 | Beneficial (however, this depends on drinking patterns and volume of consumption) | Causally related | ( | ||
| IIE1 | Unipolar depressive disorders | F32–F33, F34.1 | Detrimental | Causally related | |
| IIF1 | Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias | F01–F03, G30–G31 | Conflicting evidence (mainly beneficial) | Insufficient causal evidence | |
| IIF3 | Epilepsy | G40–G41 | Detrimental | Causally related | ( |
| IIH2 | Hypertensive heart disease | I11–I13 | Detrimental (however, this depends on drinking patterns and volume of consumption) | Causally related | ( |
| IIH3 | Ischemic heart disease | I20–I25 | Beneficial (however, this depends on drinking patterns and volume of consumption) | Causally related | ( |
| IIH4a | Ischemic stroke | I63–I67, I69.3 | Beneficial (however, this depends on drinking patterns and volume of consumption) | Causally related | ( |
Figure 2The relationship between increasing amounts of average daily alcohol consumption and the relative risk for cancer, with lifetime abstainers serving as the reference group.
SOURCE: Lim et al. 2012.
Figure 3The relationship between increasing amounts of average daily alcohol consumption and the relative risk for diabetes and epilepsy, with lifetime abstainers serving as the reference group.
SOURCE: Lim et al. 2012.
Figure 4The relationship between increasing amounts of average daily alcohol consumption and the relative risk for cardiovascular diseases (i.e., hypertension, conduction disorders, and ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke), with lifetime abstainers serving as the reference group. For both hypertension and hemorrhagic and ischemic stroke, the relationship differs between men and women. Moreover, for both ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke, the influence of alcohol consumption on mortality is much greater than the influence on morbidity, at least in women. In men, no such difference appears to exist.
SOURCE: Lim et al. 2012.
Figure 5The relationship between increasing amounts of average daily alcohol consumption and the relative risk for ischemic heart disease, with lifetime abstainers serving as the reference group. Low to moderate alcohol consumption has a beneficial effect on both mortality and morbidity from ischemic heart disease. However, the specific effects depend on both the gender and the age of the drinker, with the greatest beneficial effects of low-to-moderate consumption seen on morbidity from ischemic heart disease in women ages 15 to 34.
SOURCE: Lim et al. 2012.
Figure 6The relationship between increasing amounts of average daily alcohol consumption and the relative risk for digestive diseases (i.e., liver cirrhosis and pancreatitis), with lifetime abstainers serving as the reference group. For liver cirrhosis, alcohol’s effects on mortality are greater than those on morbidity, and slight differences exist between the effects in men and women.
SOURCE: Lim et al. 2012.
Total Economic Costs of Excessive Alcohol Consumption in the United States, 2006
| Alcohol Abuse and Dependence | $10,668.457 |
| Primary Diagnoses Attributable to Alcohol | 8,526.822 |
| Inpatient Hospital | 5,115.568 |
| Physician Office and Hospital Ambulatory Care | 1,195.946 |
| Nursing Home Care | 1,002.888 |
| Retail Pharmacy and Other Health Professional | 1,212.420 |
| Fetal Alcohol Syndrome | 2,538.004 |
| Other Health System Costs | 2,822.308 |
| Prevention and Research | 1,207.120 |
| Training | 29.527 |
| Health Insurance Administration | 1,585.660 |
| Impaired Productivity | $83,695.036 |
| Traditional Earnings | 74,101.827 |
| Household Productivity | 5,355.629 |
| Absenteeism | 4,237.580 |
| Institutionalization/Hospitalization | 2,053.308 |
| Mortality | 65,062.211 |
| Incarcerations | 6,328.915 |
| Victims of Crime | 2,092.886 |
| Fetal Alcohol Syndrome | 2,053.748 |
| Crime Victim Property Damage | $439.766 |
| Criminal Justice System | 20,972.690 |
| Motor Vehicle Crashes | 13,718.406 |
| Fire Losses | 2,137.300 |
| FAS Special Education | 368.768 |
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