There is a strong link between alcohol and non-communicable diseases, particularly cancer, cardiovascular disease, liver disease, pancreatitis, diabetes, as well as mental disorders and these findings support calls by the World Health Organization to implement evidence-based strategies to prevent and reduce alcohol harm…

Author

Charles Parry /E-mail: az.ca.crm@yrrapc), Jayadeep Patra, and Jürgen Rehm

Citation

Parry C, Patra J, Rehm J. Alcohol consumption and non-communicable diseases: epidemiology and policy implications. Addiction (Abingdon, England). 2011;106(10):1718-1724. doi:10.1111/j.1360-0443.2011.03605.x.


Source
Addiction Journal
Release date
03/10/2011

Alcohol consumption and non-communicable diseases: epidemiology and policy implications

Abstract

Aims

This paper summarizes the relationships between different patterns of alcohol consumption and various on non-communicable disease (NCD) outcomes and estimates the percentage of NCD burden that is attributable to alcohol.

Methods

A narrative review, based on published meta-analyses of alcohol consumption-disease relations, together with an examination of the Comparative Risk Assessment estimates applied to the latest available revision of Global Burden of Disease study.

Results

Alcohol is causally linked (to varying degrees) to eight different cancers, with the risk increasing with the volume consumed. Similarly, alcohol use is related detrimentally to many cardiovascular outcomes, including hypertension, haemorrhagic stroke and atrial fibrillation. For other cardiovascular outcomes the relationship is more complex. Alcohol is furthermore linked to various forms of liver disease (particularly with fatty liver, alcoholic hepatitis and cirrhosis) and pancreatitis. For diabetes the relationship is also complex. For mental ill-health, there are associations of alcohol use and alcohol use disorders with almost every mental disorder.

Conservatively, of the global NCD-related burden of deaths, net years of life lost (YLL) and net disability adjusted life years (DALYs), 3.4%, 5.0% and 2.4%, respectively, can be attributed to alcohol consumption, with the burden being particularly high for cancer and liver cirrhosis. This burden is especially pronounced in countries of the former Soviet Union.

Conclusions

There is a strong link between alcohol and non-communicable diseases, particularly cancer, cardiovascular disease, liver disease, pancreatitis, diabetes, as well as mental disorders and these findings support calls by the World Health Organization to implement evidence-based strategies to prevent and reduce alcohol harm.


Source Website: Pub Med - US National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health