Does Serum Uric Acid Mediate Relation between Healthy Lifestyle and Components of Metabolic Syndrome?

Author:

Huang Yan1ORCID,Jing Hui1,Wang Ziping1,Li Zongkai1,Chacha Samuel2ORCID,Teng Yuxin3,Mi Baibing1ORCID,Zhang Binyan1ORCID,Liu Yezhou1,Li Qiang1ORCID,Shen Yuan1,Yang Jiaomei1,Qu Yang4,Wang Duolao5,Yan Hong1,Dang Shaonong16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Xi’an Jiaotong University Health Science Center, Xi’an 710061, China

2. Department of Molecular Diagnostics, Sumbwanga Regional Referral Hospital, Rukwa 413, Tanzania

3. Department of Human Resources, The Second Affiliated Hospital of Xi’an Jiaotong University, Xi’an 710004, China

4. HKU Business School, 3/F K.K. Leung Building, The University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam Road, Hong Kong

5. Department of Clinical Sciences, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool L7 8XZ, UK

6. Key Laboratory of Environment and Genes Related to Diseases, Xi’an Jiaotong University, Ministry of Education, Xi’an 710061, China

Abstract

A healthy lifestyle is related to metabolic syndrome (MetS), but the mechanism is not fully understood. This study aimed to examine the association of components of MetS with lifestyle in a Chinese population and potential mediation role of serum uric acid (SUA) in the association between lifestyle behaviors and risk of components of MetS. Data were derived from a baseline survey of the Shaanxi urban cohort in the Regional Ethnic Cohort Study in northwest China. The relationship between components of MetS, healthy lifestyle score (HLS), and SUA was investigated by logistic or linear regression. A counterfactual-based mediation analysis was performed to ascertain whether and to what extent SUA mediated the total effect of HLS on components of MetS. Compared to those with 1 or less low-risk lifestyle factors, participants with 4–5 factors had 43.6% lower risk of impaired glucose tolerance (OR = 0.564; 95%CI: 0.408~0.778), 60.8% reduction in risk of high blood pressure (OR = 0.392; 95%CI: 0.321~0.478), 69.4% reduction in risk of hypertriglyceridemia (OR = 0.306; 95%CI: 0.252~0.372), and 47.3% lower risk of low levels of HDL cholesterol (OR = 0.527; 95%CI: 0.434~0.641). SUA mediated 2.95% (95%CI: 1.81~6.16%) of the total effect of HLS on impaired glucose tolerance, 14.68% (95%CI: 12.04~18.85%) on high blood pressure, 17.29% (95%CI: 15.01~20.5%) on hypertriglyceridemia, and 12.83% (95%CI: 10.22~17.48%) on low levels of HDL cholesterol. Increased HLS tends to reduce risk of components of MetS partly by decreasing the SUA level, which could be an important mechanism by which lifestyle influences MetS.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

Natural Science Basic Research Program of Shaanxi Province

Scientific Research Project Xi’an Municipal Health Commission

Publisher

MDPI AG

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