<p>The present study examined the association between alcohol consumption and hyperuricemia in Japanese men and women. This is a population-based retrospective cohort study (ISSA-CKD study). A total of 5153 participants without hyperuricemia were followed up from baseline (first health check-up of each participant) to the last visit during the study period (2008–2019). Alcohol consumption was classified into non-drinkers, occasional, and daily drinkers (average alcohol intake &lt; 22&#xa0;g/day, 22–43&#xa0;g/day, 44–65&#xa0;g/day, or ≥ 66&#xa0;g/day). The outcome was incident hyperuricemia (uric acid &gt; 416&#xa0;μmol/L [7.0&#xa0;mg/dL]). During average follow-up of 5.5&#xa0;years, 496 men and 128 women developed new-onset hyperuricemia. Increases in the incidence (per 1,000 person-years) of hyperuricemia were associated with the frequency/amount of alcohol consumed among men (non-drinkers: 33.7, occasional: 43.9, daily (&lt; 22&#xa0;g/day): 41.7, daily 22–43&#xa0;g/day: 60.6, daily 44–65&#xa0;g/day: 68.0, and daily ≥ 66&#xa0;g/day: 92.7; <i>P</i> &lt; 0.001). Similar results were observed in women (non-drinkers: 6.1, occasional: 10.3, daily (&lt; 22&#xa0;g/day): 8.8, daily(≥ 22&#xa0;g/day): 13.4; <i>P</i> = 0.0051). After multivariable adjustment, hazard ratios increased with higher alcohol consumption in both men and women. In conclusion, alcohol consumption was associated with an increased risk of hyperuricemia in each sex. Even low or occasional intake elevated the risk, indicating no safe level of alcohol consumption.</p>

错误:搜索内容不能为空,请输入英文关键词
错误:关键词超出字数限制,请精简
高级检索

Alcohol consumption and the incidence of hyperuricemia in Japanese men and women

  • Tamami Ueno,
  • Kazumi Kawano,
  • Chihiro Nohara,
  • Kaori Maki,
  • Kazuyo Iwanaga,
  • Akiko Morinaga,
  • Shunsuke Funakoshi,
  • Makiko Abe,
  • Atsushi Satoh,
  • Miki Kawazoe,
  • Toshiki Maeda,
  • Chikara Yoshimura,
  • Koji Takahashi,
  • Kazuhiro Tada,
  • Kenji Ito,
  • Tetsuhiko Yasuno,
  • Shigeaki Mukobara,
  • Daiji Kawanami,
  • Kosuke Masutani,
  • Hisatomi Arima

摘要

The present study examined the association between alcohol consumption and hyperuricemia in Japanese men and women. This is a population-based retrospective cohort study (ISSA-CKD study). A total of 5153 participants without hyperuricemia were followed up from baseline (first health check-up of each participant) to the last visit during the study period (2008–2019). Alcohol consumption was classified into non-drinkers, occasional, and daily drinkers (average alcohol intake < 22 g/day, 22–43 g/day, 44–65 g/day, or ≥ 66 g/day). The outcome was incident hyperuricemia (uric acid > 416 μmol/L [7.0 mg/dL]). During average follow-up of 5.5 years, 496 men and 128 women developed new-onset hyperuricemia. Increases in the incidence (per 1,000 person-years) of hyperuricemia were associated with the frequency/amount of alcohol consumed among men (non-drinkers: 33.7, occasional: 43.9, daily (< 22 g/day): 41.7, daily 22–43 g/day: 60.6, daily 44–65 g/day: 68.0, and daily ≥ 66 g/day: 92.7; P < 0.001). Similar results were observed in women (non-drinkers: 6.1, occasional: 10.3, daily (< 22 g/day): 8.8, daily(≥ 22 g/day): 13.4; P = 0.0051). After multivariable adjustment, hazard ratios increased with higher alcohol consumption in both men and women. In conclusion, alcohol consumption was associated with an increased risk of hyperuricemia in each sex. Even low or occasional intake elevated the risk, indicating no safe level of alcohol consumption.