Epidemiology of gout in women: Fifty‐two–year followup of a prospective cohort
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Open Access
- 21 January 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Arthritis & Rheumatism
- Vol. 62 (4) , 1069-1076
- https://doi.org/10.1002/art.27338
Abstract
Objective Despite the recent doubling of the incidence of gout among women and its substantial prevalence particularly in the aging female population, the risk factors for gout among women remain unknown. We undertook this study to evaluate purported risk factors for incident gout among women and to compare them with those among men. Methods Using prospective data from the Framingham Heart Study, we examined over a 52-year period (1950–2002) the relationship between purported risk factors and the incidence of gout in 2,476 women and 1,951 men. Results We documented 304 incident cases of gout, 104 of them among women. The incidence rates of gout for women per 1,000 person-years according to serum uric acid levels of P for trend < 0.0001). The magnitude of this association was lower than that among men (P for interaction = 0.0002). Multivariate relative risks conferred by increasing age (per 5 years), obesity (body mass index ≥30 kg/m2), alcohol intake (≥7 ounces of pure alcohol/week), hypertension, and diuretic use were 1.24, 2.74, 3.10, 1.82, and 2.39, respectively (all P < 0.05), for women. Conclusion These prospective data with long-term followup provide evidence that higher levels of serum uric acid increase the risk of gout in a graded manner among women, but the rate of increase is lower than that among men. Increasing age, obesity, alcohol consumption, hypertension, and diuretic use were associated with the risk of incident gout among women.This publication has 51 references indexed in Scilit:
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