Alcohol Abuse and Acute Lung Injury: Can We Target Therapy?
Overview
Affiliations
Recent studies have revealed an important but previously unrecognized association between alcohol abuse and the risk of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). This devastating form of lung injury strikes individuals of any age following insults, such as major trauma or sepsis, and even with state-of-the-art medical care it has a mortality as high as 50%. Although the precise incidence is unknown, it is estimated that 200,000 individuals develop ARDS each year in the USA alone. Alcohol abuse independently increases the risk approximately two- to fourfold and, therefore, causes tens of thousands of excess deaths annually. When one couples these grim estimates with the well-recognized association between alcohol abuse and severe lung infections, such as bacterial pneumonia and tuberculosis, it is apparent that alcohol-related lung diseases are a major public health problem. Exciting new studies reveal that the alcoholic lung is characterized by discrete changes in cellular function within the lower airways, mediated via oxidant stress and altered signaling pathways and, in experimental models, is highly amenable to targeted therapies. Furthermore, these therapies are already used clinically for other conditions and could readily be tested in clinical studies of alcoholics at high risk for ARDS and/or with severe lung infections. This article focuses on the epidemiology and pathophysiology of alcohol-induced lung dysfunction and discusses potential new treatments that are suggested by recent experimental findings.
Gajendran M, Prakash B, Perisetti A, Umapathy C, Gupta V, Collins L Frontline Gastroenterol. 2021; 12(6):478-486.
PMID: 34712465 PMC: 8515274. DOI: 10.1136/flgastro-2020-101496.
Barr T, Girke T, Sureshchandra S, Nguyen C, Grant K, Messaoudi I J Immunol. 2015; 196(1):182-95.
PMID: 26621857 PMC: 4685011. DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1501527.
Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors are sensors for ethanol in lung fibroblasts.
Ritzenthaler J, Roser-Page S, Guidot D, Roman J Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2013; 37(6):914-23.
PMID: 23421903 PMC: 4337029. DOI: 10.1111/acer.12044.