| Literature DB >> 33783063 |
Jürgen Rehm1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8, Jayadeep Patra1,2, Alan Brennan9, Charlotte Buckley10, Thomas K Greenfield11, William C Kerr11, Jakob Manthey4,8,12, Robin C Purshouse10, Pol Rovira7, Paul A Shuper1,2,3, Kevin D Shield1,2,3.
Abstract
ISSUES: Alcohol use has been shown to impact on various forms of liver disease, not restricted to alcoholic liver disease. APPROACH: We developed a conceptual framework based on a narrative review of the literature to identify causal associations between alcohol use and various forms of liver disease including the complex interactions of alcohol with other major risk factors. Based on this framework, we estimate the identified relations for 2017 for the USA. KEYEntities:
Keywords: alcohol; hepatitis C virus; liver disease; metabolic dysfunction; mortality incidence
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33783063 PMCID: PMC9389623 DOI: 10.1111/dar.13286
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Alcohol Rev ISSN: 0959-5236
Figure 1.The role of alcohol use in the aetiology and course of liver disease. HBV, hepatitis B virus; HCV, hepatitis C virus.
Sources and assumptions for modelling the impact of alcohol on incidence and course of liver disease
| Mechanism | Consequence | Exposure on (data based on [ | Risk relations | Further assumptions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| All data from [ | ||||
|
| ||||
| Heavy drinking over time on alcoholic liver cirrhosis | Alcoholic liver cirrhosis[ | Not applicable; alcoholic liver cirrhosis was estimated directly | Not applicable | An underestimate as it is a stigmatised disease (see text) |
| Heavy-drinking occasion on sexual transmission of HBV and HCV | Acute HBV and HCV incidence | Heavy-drinking occasions (defined as >48 g pure alcohol/day in women; >60 g/day in men; [ | Rehm | Alcohol’s impact on sexual transmission applies to all sexually transmitted diseases |
| Alcohol use is linked to decreased clearance of acute HBV and HCV leading to increased chronic HBV and HCV cases | Chronic HBV incidence; chronic HCV incidence | All populations with HBV or HCV infections -> higher average drinking level (for distribution based on mean, see [ | Aisyah | Similar impact of alcohol on clearance of HBV and HCV |
| Alcohol use interaction with chronic HBV and HCV in the course of liver disease progression | Cirrhosis due to HBV; cirrhosis due to HCV[ | All populations with HBV or HCV infections -> higher average drinking level (for distribution based on mean see [ | Llamosas-Falcón | Similar impact of alcohol on disease progression of HBV and HCV infections |
| Alcohol use interaction with obesity on liver cirrhosis | Liver cirrhosis incidence[ | Chronic heavy drinkers (defined as >40 g pure alcohol/day in women; >60 g/day in men) | Patra | |
| Alcohol use on liver disease complications, for example liver cancer | Liver cancer incidence | Population distribution of consumption plus effect of former drinkers [ | For drinkers: Turati | Average lag time of 10 years between exposure and outcome [ |
| Continued alcohol consumption on chronic liver disease death (excluding liver cancer) | Liver cirrhosis death[ | Rehm | Assumption of impact of alcohol on mortality within a year (comparative risk assessment methodology) | |
Liver cirrhosis is defined broadly as comprising other chronic liver disease: B18-B18.9, I85-I85.9, I98.2, K70-K70.9, K71.3-K71.51, K71.7, K72.1-K74.69, K74.9, K75.8-K76.0, K76.6-K76.7, K76.9. HBV, hepatitis B virus; HCV, hepatitis C virus.
Estimates of alcohol exposure in the USA in the year 2017 (based on [45])
| Sex | Age, years | Mean daily alcohol intake among drinkers[ | Prevalence of | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lifetime abstinence | Past-year abstinence | Less than 40 g/day | 40–60 g/day | 60–100 g/day | At least 100 g/day | |||
|
| ||||||||
| Women | 15–34 | 14.3 (13.6–15.1) | 14.4% (12.5–17.1) | 16.6% (14.7–19.3) | 63.2% (62.4–63.8) | 3.7% (3.3–4.1) | 1.8% (1.6–2.2) | 0.3% (0.2–0.5) |
| 35–49 | 14.0 (13.4–14.6) | 10.3% (9–12) | 16.2% (15–17.9) | 67.5% (66.9–68.1) | 3.8% (3.4–4.2) | 1.9% (1.6–2.2) | 0.3% (0.2–0.4) | |
| 50–64 | 13.2 (12.5–13.9) | 13.7% (11.9–15.7) | 19.6% (17.8–21.6) | 61.9% (61.3–62.4) | 3.1% (2.8–3.5) | 1.4% (1.2–1.7) | 0.2% (0.1–0.3) | |
| 65+ | 12.0 (11.2–13.0) | 24.5% (21.5–27.6) | 25.1% (22.2–28.3) | 47.5% (46.9–48) | 2% (1.7–2.4) | 0.8% (0.6–1.1) | 0.1% (0–0.2) | |
| Men | 15–34 | 32.9 (30.9–34.7) | 8.6% (7.1–10.2) | 10.8% (9.3–12.4) | 57.5% (56.1–59) | 9.3% (8.8–9.8) | 8.7% (8–9.3) | 5.2% (4.3–5.9) |
| 35–49 | 40.0 (37.1–42.6) | 4.5% (3.8–5.2) | 10.2% (9.5–11) | 55.8% (54–57.7) | 10.3% (9.8–10.9) | 10.8% (10–11.5) | 8.4% (7.3–9.6) | |
| 50–64 | 39.1 (36.6–41.7) | 5.5% (4.8–6.5) | 12.1% (11.4–13.1) | 54.4% (52.7–56.1) | 9.9% (9.4–10.5) | 10.2% (9.5–10.9) | 7.8% (6.7–8.8) | |
| 65+ | 33.4 (31.5–35.5) | 8.7% (7.3–10.2) | 19% (17.7–20.6) | 51.2% (49.9–52.6) | 8.4% (7.9–8.8) | 7.9% (7.3–8.5) | 4.8% (4.1–5.6) | |
In grams pure alcohol per day. Numbers in parentheses denote 95% uncertainty interval.
Estimates of the effects of alcohol consumption on liver disease in the USA in 2017
| Mechanism | Consequence | Women | Men | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Heavy drinking over time on alcoholic liver cirrhosis | Alcoholic liver cirrhosis incidence | 13 000 (12 100–14 000) | 22 100 (20 700–23 700) | 35 200 (32 800–37 800) |
| Heavy-drinking occasions on sexual transmission of HBV and HCV | Acute HBV incidence | 10 (0–30) | 210 (140–320) | 220 (150–340) |
| Acute HCV incidence | 100 (0–250) | 1300 (900–2000) | 1400 (900–2100) | |
| Acute HBV and HCV incidence | 100 (0–250) | 1600 (1000–2400) | 1700 (1100–2500) | |
| Alcohol use linked-decrease in clearance of acute HBV and HCV leading-increased chronic HBV and HCV cases | Chronic HBV incidence | 3100 (2200–4000) | 10 900 (3800–15 500) | 14 000 (5900–19 500) |
| Chronic HCV incidence | 350 (250–460) | 1350 (470–1900) | 1700 (700–2400) | |
| Alcohol use interaction with chronic HBV and HCV in the course of liver disease progression | Cirrhosis due—HBV | 170 (50–300) | 1000 (700–1400) | 1200 (900–1500) |
| Cirrhosis due—HCV | 1300 (390–2200) | 6400 (4300–8500) | 7700 (6000–9400) | |
| Alcohol use interaction with obesity on liver cirrhosis | Liver cirrhosis incidence | 2600 (1600–3800) | 7800 (5300–10 800) | 10 400 (8400–12 800) |
| Alcohol use on liver disease, for example liver cancer | Liver cancer incidence | 2800 (1200–4300) | 5500 (3000–8400) | 8300 (5300–11 600) |
| Liver cancer death | 3600 (1200–4100) | 4100 (2200–6300) | 6600 (4200–9300) | |
| Continued alcohol consumption on chronic liver disease death (excluding liver cancer) | Liver cirrhosis death | 14 000 (11 700–16 800) | 26 600 (23 100–29 500) | 40 700 (36 600–44 600) |
Data were rounded—to the next 10 for numbers below 1000; and to the next 100 for numbers above 1000. Numbers in parentheses denote the 95% uncertainty interval. See Methods and Materials and Data S1 (Supporting Information) for details on calculation. HBV, hepatitis B virus; HCV, hepatitis C virus.