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Saturday, January 26, 2008

Association of Lifetime Alcohol Drinking Trajectories with Cardiometabolic Risk
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism Vol. 93, No. 1 154-161



Alcohol intakes may vary considerably over a drinker’s lifetime. This study was designed to examine whether lifetime drinking trajectories are associated with cardiovascular risk factors that are used to define the metabolic syndrome (MetS).

Trajectory analyses were based on estimates of total kilograms of ethanol for each age decade between 10 and 59 yr. Two groups of drinkers with distinct lifetime drinking trajectories were obtained, an early peak and a stable trajectory group. Compared with stable trajectory drinkers, early-peak drinkers were 10 yr younger on average, had earlier onset of regular drinking, drank heavily in late adolescence and early adulthood tapering off in middle age, averaged more drinks per drinking day in lifetime, and were more likely to abstain when interviewed.

After controlling for age, sex, and other potential confounders, early-peak trajectories were modestly associated with high odds of the MetS overall, low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, abdominal obesity , and overweight.

Early initiation of alcohol drinking and heavy drinking in adolescence and early adulthood may be associated with an adverse cardiometabolic profile.

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