Alcohol consumption patterns and unhealthy aging among older lifetime drinkers from Spain.
BACKGROUND: The protective health effects of light alcohol consumption are debated due to potential selection biases, reverse causation and confounding. We examined cross-sectional and prospective associations of alcohol consumption patterns with unhealthy aging among older drinkers addressing these methodological issues.
METHODS: 2081 lifetime drinkers aged 65 + years from the Seniors-ENRICA-2 cohort followed-up for 2.4 years were classified as occasional (average lifetime alcohol intake [g/day] ≤1.43), low-risk (men: >1.43-20; women: >1.43-10), moderate-risk (men: >20-40; women: >10-20) and high-risk drinkers (men: >40; women: >20; or binge drinkers). A Mediterranean drinking pattern (MDP) was defined as occasional/low-risk drinking, wine preference and drinking only with meals. Unhealthy aging was measured with a 52-item health deficit accumulation index (DAI), with higher values indicating more health deficits.
RESULTS: A 10-g/day increment in lifetime average alcohol intake was cross-sectionally associated with a higher DAI among all drinkers (mean difference [95% confidence interval] = 0.35 [0.16, 0.53]) and moderate-/high-risk drinkers (0.41 [0.17, 0.65]), but not among occasional/low-risk drinkers. Also, the DAI was 1.35 (0.06, 2.65) points higher in high-risk versus low-risk drinkers and 2.07 (0.59, 3.60) points higher in non-adherers versus adherers to the MDP. Most associations strengthened when restricting analyses to individuals with lower disease burden and did not generally remain after 2.4 years.
CONCLUSIONS: We found no evidence of a beneficial association between low-risk alcohol consumption and unhealthy aging, but a detrimental one for high-risk drinking, which strengthened when accounting for reverse causation, although attenuated over the follow-up likely due to selective attrition of those less resilient to the harmful effects of alcohol.