One in 10 U.S. Adults Faces a Double Threat: Heavy Drinking and Obesity

By: Liz Reid

Heavy alcohol use and obesity are both rising in the U.S. and, increasingly, they affect the same people. A new study published today in JAMA Internal Medicine examines how often these risk factors overlap among U.S. adults, and why that matters for clinical care and health policy.

The research was led by Dr. Bryant Shuey, a board-certified general internist at UPMC and a clinician-investigator at the University of Pittsburgh Center for Research on Health Care, whose work focuses on substance use, chronic diseases and access to care. Using national survey data from U.S. adults, the study highlights a critical but often missed opportunity to address overlapping risk factors years before serious liver disease typically develops.

Why did you examine heavy drinking and obesity together?

Dr. Shuey: In my clinical work, I’ve been seeing more people in their 30s and 40s coming to the hospital with advanced liver disease linked to both alcohol use and metabolic risk factors. Nationally, heavy drinking and obesity are both becoming more common and there has been greater recognition that alcohol and metabolic disease can combine to accelerate liver disease progression. Treatment of both conditions, especially alcohol use disorder, is also lagging, as evident by research by my colleague and study co-author Dr. Eden Bernstein from the University of Colorado. Together, we sought to understand how often risky alcohol use and obesity overlap and what it might mean for prevention and earlier intervention.

What is the most important takeaway from this study?

Dr. Shuey: The key finding is that about 1 in 10 U.S. adults reported both heavy drinking and a body mass index of 30 or greater in 2023. That’s a substantial share of the population, especially considering how strongly each of these factors contributes to liver disease risk on its own.

What stood out most was how early this overlap appears. Rates were highest among young and middle-aged adults, when risk factors for serious liver disease are just beginning to build. These findings suggest that many people are entering adulthood with multiple, reinforcing risk factors for liver disease long before they ever develop symptoms.

How do patients with alcohol and metabolically related liver disease typically present?

Dr. Shuey: Patients can show up at different points along the disease course. Some are identified early by their primary care doctor by discussing risk factors like alcohol use and metabolic health and ordering blood work and liver imaging. Others present later, sometimes to the emergency department, with symptoms of advanced liver disease, or cirrhosis, like jaundice, abdominal swelling or gastrointestinal bleeding. Liver disease can lurk for years with no symptoms, so for some, that’s the first time they’re learning they have liver disease. Whether the illness is driven mainly by metabolic disease, alcohol use or a combination of both, if unchecked, the outcome can be the same: progressive liver damage that can lead to cirrhosis and liver failure. That’s why it’s so important to address these risk factors together, not in isolation.

How should clinicians think about caring for patients with both obesity and risky alcohol use?

Dr. Shuey: We need to routinely screen for both conditions in an empathetic and non-judgmental way and recognize how strongly they interact when it comes to liver disease risk. Clinicians should offer standard evidence-based options to treat both conditions: dietary counseling, motivational interviewing, medications for alcohol use disorder and therapies for metabolic disease such as GLP-1s and related weight loss drugs. There’s growing interest in these medications because they help people reduce their metabolic risk through weight loss and reversing inflammation in metabolic liver disease. Additionally, a smaller trial last year found that GLP-1s may reduce alcohol use among people with alcohol use disorder. While these results should not be overstated, GLP-1s may emerge as an important dual-therapeutic for patients with risky alcohol use and obesity if these findings hold up in larger trials. Ultimately, addressing both risk factors together may be an important strategy to change long-term outcomes.

What do you say to patients who are struggling with both obesity and problematic alcohol use?

Dr. Shuey: The most important thing is creating space to talk about these concerns without judgment. I would want to learn about their goals, explore their understanding of the health impacts of alcohol use and metabolic disease, counsel them on treatment options and support them in their decision. For some people, the priority is avoiding serious illness down the road. Others may want to lose weight, drink less or stop drinking altogether. While addressing both conditions simultaneously may be of interest to some patients, others may feel overwhelmed and want to focus on just one. There isn’t a single right goal.

What are the biggest barriers for patients, and what should health systems and policymakers take away from this?

Dr. Shuey: Our social conditions shape our health. Improving access to affordable, healthy foods and safe spaces for exercise and activity can go a long way in helping people attain their highest level of health. Bolstering public health messaging about the lesser-known risk of liver disease as a complication of alcohol use and metabolic disease is also critical to helping people make informed decisions. Furthermore, stigma around both weight and alcohol use can discourage people from seeking care in the first place. Fewer than 10% of people with an alcohol use disorder receive treatment, and just 5% are prescribed evidence-based medications that have been demonstrated to reduce alcohol use. Clinicians can be a part of the solution by ensuring they are offering patients standard treatments for alcohol use disorder.

Health care affordability and access to care are major barriers to timely diagnosis and treatment of alcohol- and metabolic-related health issues, particularly for people who are uninsured. Preventing progression to advanced liver disease isn’t just better for patients, it’s far less expensive than treating cirrhosis and its complications. In the U.S., we spend an estimated $135 billion on liver disease every year. We need prevention-focused approaches and more equitable access to care for the populations at highest risk.

What are the most important next questions for research?

Dr. Shuey: We should figure out how to intervene earlier, when obesity and risky alcohol use first begin to overlap, long before advanced liver disease develops. We also need more data on how existing treatments work in patients with multiple, co-occurring risk factors, since many clinical trials have historically excluded these groups.

From a policy standpoint, future research should also look at how insurance coverage and access barriers affect outcomes for people at greatest risk. Better evidence in these areas could help guide more effective and equitable prevention strategies.