Association between alcohol consumption and peripheral artery disease: two de novo prospective cohorts and a systematic review with meta-analysis.

Yuan S, Wu J, Chen J, Sun Y, Burgess S, Li X, Åkesson A, Larsson SC

Eur J Prev Cardiol 32 (2) 149-155 [2025-01-27; online 2024-04-16]

The association between alcohol consumption and risk of peripheral artery disease (PAD) is inconclusive. We conducted this study to examine the association between alcohol consumption and PAD risk in two de novo cohort studies and a meta-analysis of observational studies. A systematic review was conducted to identify studies on alcohol consumption in relation to PAD risk. We further used data from two cohorts of 70 116 Swedish and 405 406 British adults and performed a meta-analysis of results from previously published studies and current cohort studies. There was a U-shaped association between alcohol consumption and incident PAD risk in the Swedish and British cohorts. The meta-analysis of results of these two cohorts and previously published studies found that compared with non- or never-drinkers, the relative risk of PAD was 0.83 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.77-0.89], 0.81 (95% CI 0.74-0.90), and 0.94 (95% CI 0.83-1.07) for light, moderate, and high-to-heavy alcohol drinkers, respectively. The nonlinear meta-analysis revealed a possibly U-shaped association between alcohol consumption and PAD risk (P nonlinearity <0.001). The risk of PAD was observed to be the lowest for 2 drinks/week and to be pronounced for ≥10 drinks/week. All these associations persisted in a sensitivity meta-analysis including cohort and other types of observational studies. Alcohol intake ≤2 drinks/week was associated with a reduced risk of PAD, and the risk of PAD became pronounced with intake ≥10 drinkers/week.

Bioinformatics Support for Computational Resources [Service]

PubMed 38626304

DOI 10.1093/eurjpc/zwae142

Crossref 10.1093/eurjpc/zwae142

mid: EMS197946
pmc: PMC7616826
pii: 7646796


Publications 9.5.1