Reference
Vasquez, Monica M, et al. “Persistent Light to Moderate Alcohol Intake and Lung Function: A Longitudinal Study”. Alcohol, vol. 67, Mar. 2018, pp. 65–71.
Abstract
Alcohol intake has been inconsistently associated with lung
function levels in cross-sectional studies. The goal of our
study was to determine whether longitudinally assessed
light-to-moderate alcohol intake is associated with levels and
decline of lung function. We examined data from 1333 adult
participants in the population-based Tucson Epidemiological
Study of Airway Obstructive Disease. Alcohol intake was assessed
with four surveys between 1972 and 1992. Subjects who completed
at least two surveys were classified into longitudinal drinking
categories (``never'', ``inconsistent'', or ``persistent
drinker''). Spirometric lung function was measured in up to 11
surveys between 1972 and 1992. Random coefficient models were
used to test for differences in lung function by drinking
categories. After adjustment for sex, age, height, education,
BMI categories, smoking status, and pack-years, as compared to
never-drinkers, persistent drinkers had higher FVC (coefficient:
157 mL, p < 0.001), but lower FEV1/FVC ratio (−2.3%, p <
0.001). Differences were due to a slower decline of FVC among
persistent than among never-drinkers (p = 0.003), and these
trends were present independent of smoking status. Inconsistent
drinking showed similar, but weaker associations. After
adjustment for potential confounders, light-to-moderate alcohol
consumption was associated with a significantly decreased rate
of FVC decline over adult life.