Differential impact of recent heavy drinking on first and recurrent acute pancreatitis.

IF 3 Q2 SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Christie Y Jeon, Yu Ye, Georgios I Papachristou, James L Buxbaum, Joseph R Pisegna, Cheryl J Cherpitel, Esther A Adeniran, Minoti Apte, Eleanor Chang, Anil K Dasyam, Gayathri D Jalluri, Charlotte A Lansky, Aurelia Lugea, Zarine K Shah, Richard T Waldron, Stephen J Pandol, Dhiraj Yadav
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: While alcohol is known to sensitize the pancreas to acute injury, the role of short-term episodic drinking in regular drinkers is unknown.

Methods: We conducted a case-crossover study to (1) determine the hazardous period of drinking prior to a first episode of acute pancreatitis (FAP) or recurrent acute pancreatitis (RAP) and (2) evaluate the dose-response association between short-term drinking and FAP/RAP. Patients hospitalized for FAP/RAP with an AUDIT-C score of ≥3 were enrolled. Recent and lifetime drinking history were collected through interviews. Drinking prior to the index pancreatitis attack was compared to that of an asymptomatic control period. Conditional logistic regression quantified the association of heavy drinking and FAP/RAP.

Results: Of 141 patients who completed a short-term drinking questionnaire, 77 had RAP, and 64 experienced FAP. We found that both FAP and RAP patients drank at moderate-to-heavy levels regularly, with modest day-to-day variation (intraclass correlation of drinks/day 67%-82%). Alcohol consumption increased 2 days preceding the onset of the index pancreatitis attack as compared to the week prior. Stratifying by prior AP history, heavy drinking in the hazard period was associated with RAP (OR = 3.79, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.57-9.12). Each drink was associated with 1.22-fold (95%CI 1.10-1.35) increased odds of RAP. Short-term heavy drinking was not associated with a FAP (OR = 1.06, 95%CI 0.43-2.57).

Conclusion: In summary, we found that patients with a prior history of AP face a higher risk of RAP due to excess drinking. Drinking intensity did not increase prior to a FAP, which may have been triggered by other cofactors warranting further examination.

背景:已知酒精会使胰腺对急性损伤敏感,但经常饮酒者短期偶发性饮酒的作用尚不清楚:众所周知,酒精会使胰腺对急性损伤敏感,但经常饮酒者短期偶发性饮酒的作用尚不清楚:我们进行了一项病例交叉研究,目的是:(1) 确定首次急性胰腺炎(FAP)或复发性急性胰腺炎(RAP)发作前的危险饮酒期;(2) 评估短期饮酒与 FAP/RAP 之间的剂量-反应关系。研究对象为因 FAP/RAP 住院且 AUDIT-C 评分≥3 分的患者。通过访谈收集了近期和终生饮酒史。将胰腺炎发作前的饮酒情况与无症状对照期的饮酒情况进行比较。条件逻辑回归量化了大量饮酒与 FAP/RAP 的关系:结果:在完成短期饮酒问卷调查的 141 名患者中,77 人患有 RAP,64 人患有 FAP。我们发现,FAP 和 RAP 患者的饮酒量均为中度至重度,且每日变化不大(饮酒量/天的类内相关性为 67%-82%)。与一周前相比,胰腺炎发作前两天的饮酒量有所增加。根据之前的胰腺炎病史进行分层,危险期大量饮酒与急性胰腺炎相关(OR = 3.79,95% 置信区间 [CI] 1.57-9.12)。每次饮酒导致 RAP 的几率增加 1.22 倍(95% 置信区间 1.10-1.35)。短期大量饮酒与 FAP 无关(OR = 1.06,95%CI 0.43-2.57):总之,我们发现既往有 AP 病史的患者因过量饮酒而面临更高的 RAP 风险。在发生 FAP 之前,饮酒强度并没有增加,这可能是由其他因素引起的,值得进一步研究。
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