The effects of exceeding low-risk drinking thresholds on self-rated health and all-cause mortality in older adults: The Tromsø Study 1994-2020
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/29124Dato
2023-02-16Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Stelander, Line Tegner; Lorem, Geir F; Høye, Anne; Bramness, Jørgen Gustav; Wynn, Rolf; Grønli, Ole KristianSammendrag
Methods This is an epidemiological study utilizing repeated measures from the Tromsø study cohort. It allows followup of participants from 1994 to 2020. A total of 24,590 observations of alcohol consumption were made in older adults aged 60–99 (53% women). Primary outcome measures: Self-rated health (SRH) and all-cause mortality. SRH was reported when attending the Tromsø study. Time of death was retrieved from the Norwegian Cause of Death Registry. The follow-up time extended from the age of study entry to the age of death or end of follow-up on November 25, 2020. Predictor: Average weekly alcohol consumption (non-drinker, <100g/week, ≥100g/week). We fitted two-level logistic random effects models to examine how alcohol consumption was related to SRH, and Cox proportional hazards models to examine its relation to all-cause mortality. Both models were stratifed by sex and adjusted for sociodemographic factors, pathology, biometrics, smoking and physical activity. In addition, all the confounders were examined for whether they moderate the relationship between alcohol and the health-related outcomes through interaction analyses.
Results We found that women who consumed ≥100g/week had better SRH than those who consumed <100g/ week; OR 1.85 (1.46–2.34). This pattern was not found in men OR 1.18 (0.99–1.42). We identifed an equal mortality risk in both women and men who exceeded 100g/week compared with those who consumed less than 100g/week; HR 0.95 (0.73–1.22) and HR 0.89 (0.77–1.03), respectively.
Conclusions There was no clear evidence of an independent negative effect on either self-rated health trajectories or all-cause mortality for exceeding an average of 100g/week compared to lower drinking levels in this study with up to 25 years follow-up. However, some sex-specifc risk factors in combination with the highest level of alcohol consumption led to adverse efects on self-rated health. In men it was the use of sleeping pills or tranquilisers and≥20 years of smoking, in women it was physical illness and older age.