Updated
Updated · The Medical Republic · May 28
Review Links Alcohol to 62 Conditions, Up From 48 Under ICD-10
Updated
Updated · The Medical Republic · May 28

Review Links Alcohol to 62 Conditions, Up From 48 Under ICD-10

1 articles · Updated · The Medical Republic · May 28

Summary

  • A new review in Addiction found ICD-11 now recognizes 62 conditions fully attributable to alcohol, versus 48 under ICD-10, broadening the documented disease burden tied to drinking.
  • 56 meta-analyses, 20 Mendelian randomisation studies and other evidence showed risk generally rises with consumption, with especially consistent links across infectious disease, digestive disease and cancers including breast, liver and colorectal.
  • Low-to-moderate drinking still carried measurable risks, while alcohol was described as a major carcinogen and acute intoxication was tied to road trauma, falls, drowning, violence and self-harm; impairment was reported from blood alcohol levels of 0.03 g/dL.
  • The review found some harms can be reduced—acute risks are reversible with less drinking or abstinence—but many chronic disease processes are only partly reversible.
  • Researchers said debate remains over any cardioprotective effect at low intake, and called for better cohort methods and genetic-observational integration to sharpen estimates of alcohol-related harm.

Insights

With 62 diseases linked to alcohol, what is the real risk of a daily drink?
Is the long-held belief that moderate drinking protects your heart now completely debunked?
After the 2025 cancer warning advisory, is alcohol on track to become the new tobacco?