Evaluating the Sick Quitting Hypothesis for Frailty Status and Reducing Alcohol Use Among People With HIV in a Longitudinal Clinical Cohort Study

在一项纵向临床队列研究中评估因病戒酒假说对艾滋病毒感染者虚弱状态和减少酒精使用的影响

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Abstract

“Sick quitting”, a phenomenon describing reductions in alcohol consumption following poor health, may explain observations that alcohol appears protective for frailty risk. We examined associations between frailty and reductions in drinking frequency among people with HIV (PWH). At six Centers for AIDS Research Network of Integrated Clinical Systems (CNICS) sites between January 2012 and August 2021, we assessed whether frailty, measured via validated modified frailty phenotype, precedes reductions in drinking frequency. We associated time-updated frailty with quitting and reducing frequency of any drinking and heavy episodic drinking (HED), adjusted for demographic and clinical characteristics in Cox models. Among 5,654 PWH reporting drinking, 60% reported >monthly drinking and 18% reported ≥monthly HED. Over an average of 5.4 years, frail PWH had greater probabilities of quitting (HR:1.56, 95%CI:1.13–2.15) and reducing (HR:1.35, 95%CI:1.13–1.62) drinking frequency, as well as reducing HED frequency (HR:1.58, 95%CI:1.20–2.09) vs. robust PWH. Sick quitting likely confounds the association between alcohol use and frailty risk, requiring investigation for control.

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