Changes in alcohol intake and serum urate changes: longitudinal analyses of annual medical examination database

Author:

Fukui ShoORCID,Okada Masato,Shinozaki Tomohiro,Asano Takahiro,Nakai Takehiro,Tamaki Hiromichi,Kishimoto MitsumasaORCID,Hasegawa Hiroshi,Matsuda Takeaki,Marrugo JavierORCID,Tedeschi Sara KORCID,Choi Hyon,Solomon Daniel HORCID

Abstract

Introduction Despite the established cross-sectional association between alcohol intake and serum urate (SU), its longitudinal association remains unknown. This study aimed to determine whether changes in alcohol intake have a clinically relevant association with SU change. Method We conducted retrospective analyses using systematically collected annual medical examination data from October 2012 to October 2022 in a Japanese preventive medicine centre. The exposure was changes in alcohol intake between two consecutive visits. The association of SU changes with alcohol intake changes was estimated by mixed-effect linear regression with adjustment for relevant covariates. Results We analysed 63 486 participants (median age, 47.0 years; 55% women; 58.6% regular alcohol drinkers with a median of 1.4 drinks/day) with 370 572 visits. The median SU level was 5.3 mg/dL, and 506 (0.8%) participants had diagnoses of gout or hyperuricemia without medication use during the study period. Decreasing one daily alcohol intake had a clinically small association with SU changes (−0.019 (95% CI: −0.021 to –0.017) mg/dL). Beer had the largest association with SU (−0.036 (95% CI: −0.039 to –0.032) mg/dL for one beer decrease). Complete discontinuation of any alcohol from a mean of 0.8 drinks/day was associated with −0.056 mg/dL (95% CI: −0.068 to –0.043) decrease in SU; the association became larger in hyperuricemic participants (−0.110 mg/dL (95% CI: −0.154 to –0.066) for alcohol discontinuation from a mean of 1.0 drinks/day). Conclusions This study revealed changes in alcohol intake had small associations with SU change at the general Japanese population level. Complete discontinuation of alcohol in hyperuricemic participants had only modest improvement in SU.

Funder

NIH

Publisher

BMJ

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Rhumatismes microcristallins;Revue du Rhumatisme;2024-08

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