Ingle, Suzanne M and Trickey, Adam and Lankina, Anastasia and McGinnis, Kathleen A and Justice, Amy and Cavassini, Matthias and d' Arminio Monforte, Antonella and van Sighem, Ard and Gill, M John and Crane, Heidi M and Obel, Niels and Jarrin, Inma and Wallner, Elmar and Guest, Jodie and Silverberg, Michael J and Vourli, Georgia and Wittkop, Linda and Sterling, Timothy R and Satre, Derek D and Burkholder, Greer A and Costagliola, Dominique and Sterne, Jonathan A C (2025) Harmonization of alcohol use data and mortality across a multi-national HIV cohort collaboration. Alcohol, Clinical & Experimental Research, Early online, https://doi.org/10.1111/acer.15522.
External website: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/acer.1...
BACKGROUND: Alcohol use is measured in diverse ways across settings. Harmonization of measures is necessary to assess effects of alcohol use in multi-cohort collaborations, such as studies of people with HIV (PWH).
METHODS: Data were combined from 14 HIV cohort studies (nine European, five North American) participating in the Antiretroviral Therapy Cohort Collaboration. We analyzed data on adult PWH with measured alcohol use at any time from 6 months before starting antiretroviral therapy. Five cohorts measured alcohol use with AUDIT-C and others used cohort-specific measures. We harmonized alcohol use as grams/day, calculated using country-level definitions of a standard drink. For Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT-C), we used Items 1 (frequency) and 2 (number of drinks on a typical day). Where alcohol was measured in categories, we used the mid-point to calculate grams/day. We used multivariable Cox models to estimate associations of alcohol use with mortality.
RESULTS: Alcohol use data were available for 83,424 PWH, 22,447 (27%) had AUDIT-C measures and 60,977 (73%) recorded the number of drinks/units per week/day. Of the sample, 19,150 (23%) were female, 54,006 (65%) had White ethnicity, and median age was 42 years. Median alcohol use was 0.3 g/day (interquartile range [IQR] 0-4.8) and 0 g/day (IQR 0-20) for those with and without AUDIT-C. There was a J-shaped relationship between grams/day and mortality, with higher mortality for PWH reporting no alcohol use (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 1.46; 95% CI: 1.23-1.72) and heavier (>61.0 g/day) alcohol use (aHR 1.92; 1.41-2.59) compared with 0.1-5.5 g/day among those with AUDIT-C measures. Associations were similar among those with non-AUDIT-C measures.
CONCLUSIONS: Grams/day is a useful metric to harmonize diverse measures of alcohol use. Magnitudes of associations of alcohol use with mortality may differ by setting and measurement method. Higher mortality among those with heavier alcohol use strengthens the case for interventions to reduce drinking.
B Substances > Alcohol
G Health and disease > Disease by cause (Aetiology) > Communicable / infectious disease > HIV
HA Screening, identification, and diagnostic method > Physical / medical screening, assessment and diagnostic method
J Health care, prevention, harm reduction and treatment > Identification and screening > Identification and screening for substance use
P Demography, epidemiology, and history > Population dynamics > Substance related mortality / death
R Research > Research and evaluation method
VA Geographic area > International
Repository Staff Only: item control page