Abstract

Although alcohol intake and hepatitis B and C virus (HBV and HCV) infections are the major determinants of liver cirrhosis (LC) in western countries, the joint effect of these factors on LC risk has not yet been adequately studied. Data from three case-control studies performed in Italy were used. Cases were 462 cirrhotic patients admitted to Hospitals for liver decompensation. Controls were 651 inpatients admitted for acute diseases unrelated to alcohol. Alcohol consumption was expressed as lifetime daily alcohol intake (LDAI). Three approaches were used to explore the interaction structure. The Breslow and Storer parametric family of relative risk functions showed that an intermediate structure of interaction from additive to multiplicative was the most adequate one. The Rothman synergism index showed that the interaction structure between LDAI and viral status differed significantly from the additive model in particular for high levels of alcohol intake. When multiple regression additive and multiplicative models were compared after adjustment for the known confounding variables. a trend of the interaction structure towards the multiplicative model was observed at increasing levels of consumption. Better methods are needed for assessing mixed interaction structures in conditions characterized by multifactorial etiologies like cirrhosis of the liver.

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