Huerta, José M.Colorado-yohar, Sandra M.Andreu-reinón, M. EncarnaciónMokoroa, OlatzTainta, MikelGuevara, MarcelaGasque, AlbaCastilla, JesúsPetrova, DafinaCrous-bou, MartaZamora-ros, RaúlSánchez, María JoséChirlaque, María Dolores2025-11-132025-11-132025-10-14https://hdl.handle.net/2445/224343Background: Alcohol consumption has been described to exhibit a J-shaped relationship with dementia risk, but previous observations may be partly biased due to sick-quitters and competing risks of death. Objective: To examine the association between baseline and lifetime alcohol consumption and the risk of dementia and subtypes in a large Mediterranean cohort, accounting for lifetime drinking patterns, potential confounding, and competing risks of death. Methods: Prospective study of 30,211 participants, 29-69 years at recruitment (1992-1996), from the EPIC-Spain dementia cohort. Alcohol intake was assessed using a validated dietary history and retrospective questionnaires covering ages 20, 30, and 40 years. Dementia cases (n = 1,114) were ascertained through linkage with healthcare and mortality databases and individual medical record review over a mean follow-up of 22.8 years. Multivariate competing risk models were used to estimate sub-hazard ratios (sHRs) for dementia by categories of baseline and lifetime alcohol consumption, using lifetime abstainers as the reference group. Results: Mean lifetime alcohol consumption was 41.9 and 4.4 g/d in men and women, respectively. No significant associations were found between baseline or lifetime alcohol consumption and risk of overall dementia (sHR(currentvs.never) = 0.96, 95% CI: 0.82, 1.13; sHR(evervs.never) = 0.96, 95% CI: 0.82, 1.11), Alzheimer's disease, or non-Alzheimer subtypes. These null findings remained consistent across strata of sex, BMI or smoking categories, and by beverage type. Sensitivity analyses excluding mis-reporters of energy intake or low-quality diagnoses yielded similar results. Conclusions: In this large prospective cohort with over 1,100 dementia cases and long-term follow-up, alcohol consumption was not significantly associated with dementia risk. These findings challenge the notion of a protective effect of moderate drinking and warrant continued investigation using methodologically rigorous approaches to clarify the role of alcohol dose, timing, and pattern on dementia risk.application/pdfengAddressing common biases in the evaluation of lifetime alcohol consumption patterns and dementia risk: the EPIC-Spain dementia cohortinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article2025-11-12info:eu-repo/semantics/embargoedAccess