Objective
Obesity is associated with gout risk. It is unclear whether obesity is associated with a younger age of gout onset. We examined whether obesity is related to age at gout onset and quantified the risk of incident gout by obesity status in the Campaign Against Cancer and Heart Disease (CLUE II) study, a longitudinal community-based cohort.
Methods
CLUE II began in 1989 as a cohort study of residents living within or surrounding Washington County, Maryland. Follow-up questionnaires queried whether each participant had been diagnosed with gout by a healthcare professional. Among participants with gout, we assessed whether obesity was related to age at disease onset. We also ascertained the eighteen-year risk of incident gout according to obesity status (BMI ≥30 kg/m2) at baseline with cumulative incidence ratios (RR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) from Poisson regression.
Results
Among the study population (n=15,533), 517 developed incident gout. The prevalence of obesity at baseline was 16.2%. The overall mean age at gout onset was 59.3 years. The onset of gout was 3.1 years (95% CI: 0.3, 5.8) earlier in those who were obese at baseline and 11.0 years earlier (95% CI: 5.8, 16.1) in participants who were obese at age 21, compared to their non-obese participants. The 18-year adjusted RR of gout in obese participants compared to non-obese participants was 1.92 (95% CI: 1.55, 2.37).
Conclusion
Obesity is not only a risk factor for incident gout but was associated with an earlier age at gout onset.
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