AbstractBackgroundModerate alcohol use may provide later life cognitive benefits compared to heavy alcohol use. However, results have been mixed, with reports of both increased and decreased gray and white matter volumes with moderate drinking. Additionally, alcohol use on brain health may differ by sex and race/ethnicity. Understanding the association between brain health and moderate drinking in a representative, community‐based study will provide insight into the reported cognitive benefits. We investigated the relationship between alcohol use and total brain volume (TBV) and white matter hyperintensities (WMH) in a diverse sample of middle‐aged non‐alcohol dependent community‐dwelling adults.MethodParticipants (N = 350; Mage = 54±10 years; 33 Black Men, 38 Black Women, 66 Latinx Men, 166 Latinx Women, 7 White Men, 20 White Women) from the Offspring study of Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Alzheimer’s Disease, a community‐based study in Northern Manhattan, underwent structural (TBV = 1051±106cm3) and vascular (WMH = 3±4cm3) MRI. Alcohol use was assessed by the Alcohol Use Disorder Identification Test–Concise (AUDIT‐C). Individuals likely to be alcohol dependent (AUDIT‐C = 9) were excluded (n = 16). We assessed alcohol use and TBV or WMH, adjusting for age, in the overall group, and stratified by sex/gender groups, racial/ethnic groups, and sex/gender by race/ethnicity groups.ResultOverall, greater TBV was associated with younger age (‐3.5cm3 [‐4.7, ‐2.3], p = 9E‐10) and greater alcohol use (5.1cm3 [‐6.8, 10.8], p = 0.085). No associations were found within men and women separately. Within race/ethnic groups, greater alcohol use was associated with greater TBV only among Latinx (7.6cm3 [0.1, 15.3], p = 0.055). Within sex/gender by race/ethnicity groups, greater alcohol use was associated with lower TBV among White men (‐36.8cm3 [‐45.0, ‐28.5], p = 1E‐3). There were no associations with WMH.ConclusionModerate alcohol use was not reliably associated with brain health, but the effect was on the order of 1‐2 years of aging, in a diverse sample of middle‐aged non‐alcohol dependent community‐dwelling adults. However, moderate alcohol use may have effects on brain volume within specific sex/gender and race/ethnicity groups with implications for later life cognitive impairment. Future work should explore region specific associations, alcohol use factors (i.e., context of use, alcohol type, duration of use), and its relationship to change over time.
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