On 2016 Aug 23, David Keller commented:
Results are misleadingly presented; mortality is reduced with moderate alcohol consumption
The Results section of the above abstract misleadingly states:
"The hazard ratio and 95% confidence interval in fully adjusted analyses was 1.02 (0.94-1.11) for <7 drinks/week, 1.14 (1.02-1.28) for 7 to <14 drinks/week, 1.13 (0.96-1.35) for 14 to <21 drinks/week, and 1.45 (1.16-1.81) for ≥ 21 drinks/week."
The above quote falsely implies that all amounts of alcohol consumption increased mortality, either with statistical significance, or at least by trend (depending on whether the confidence interval for a Hazard Ratio crosses 1.0).
These results are from line 5 of Table 2 of this paper, which gives the fully-adjusted results for all study participants. They are misleading, as presented, for two reasons. First, they are normalized by the Hazard Ratio of a newly-defined category called "occasional drinkers", which is a flawed and erroneously defined category of drinkers, for reasons I detail elsewhere [1]. Second, a very important data point has been omitted from these Results, namely the Hazard Ratio for non-drinkers, which is 1.19 (1.11-1.27). Why is the Hazard Ratio for non-drinkers elevated? Because it is normalized by the Hazard Ratio for "occasional drinkers", a statistical maneuver which introduces errors and obscures the true relationship of mortality with alcohol intake.
Thus informed, we see that the non-drinker can lower his Hazard Ratio for all-cause mortality from 1.19 (1.11-1.27) to 1.02 (0.94-1.11) by starting the light consumption of alcohol, drinking <7 standard alcoholic beverages per week. The confidence intervals for the Hazard Ratios of non-drinkers and light drinkers touch at 1.11, but do not overlap, so this is a significant reduction of mortality.
Again, an average non-drinker can significantly lower their risk of all-cause mortality by adding one standard 14 gram serving of ethanol per day, preferably in a dilute form such as beer (to avoid carcinogenic effects on the upper aerodigestive tracts [2]).
References
1: Keller DL, Goulden's data actually confirms that minimum mortality occurs with light-to-moderate alcohol intake, PubMed Commons, accessed on 8/22/2016 at the following URL:<br> http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27453387#cm27453387_26107
2: Keller DL. Dose-response relationship observed between concentration of ingested alcohol and cancer rate. Comment on PMID 26386538. In PubMed Commons [Internet]. National Library of Medicine; 2015 Sept 26 [cited 2015 Oct 12] at: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26386538#cm26386538_11980 The above comment is also posted on the following Annals of Internal Medicine web page: http://annals.org/article.aspx?articleid=2456121
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