Autores
RS Braithwaite, J Conigliaro, MS Roberts, S Shechter, A Schaefer, K McGinnis, MC Rodriguez, L Rabeneck, K Bryant, AC Justice
Fecha de publicación
2007/4/1
Revista
AIDS care
Volumen
19
Número
4
Páginas
459-466
Editor
Taylor & Francis Group
Descripción
Alcohol consumption is associated with decreased antiretroviral adherence, and decreased adherence results in poorer outcomes. However the magnitude of alcohol's impact on survival is unknown. Our objective was to use a calibrated and validated simulation of HIV disease to estimate the impact of alcohol on survival. We incorporated clinical data describing the temporal and dose-response relationships between alcohol consumption and adherence in a large observational cohort (N=2,702). Individuals were categorized as nondrinkers (no alcohol consumption), hazardous drinkers (consume ≥5 standard drinks on drinking days), and nonhazardous drinkers (consume <5 standard drinks on drinking days). Our results showed that nonhazardous alcohol consumption decreased survival by more than 1 year if the frequency of consumption was once per week or greater, and by 3.3 years (from 21.7 years …
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