Serum uric acid and risk for cardiovascular disease and death: the Framingham Heart Study

BF Culleton, MG Larson, WB Kannel… - Annals of internal …, 1999 - acpjournals.org
BF Culleton, MG Larson, WB Kannel, D Levy
Annals of internal medicine, 1999acpjournals.org
Background: Hyperuricemia is associated with risk for cardiovascular disease and death.
However, the role of uric acid independent of established risk factors is uncertain. Objective:
To examine the relation of serum uric acid level to incident coronary heart disease, death
from cardiovascular disease, and death from all causes. Design: Community-based,
prospective observational study. Setting: Framingham, Massachusetts. Patients: 6763
Framingham Heart Study participants (mean age, 47 years). Measurements: Serum uric acid …
Background
Hyperuricemia is associated with risk for cardiovascular disease and death. However, the role of uric acid independent of established risk factors is uncertain.
Objective
To examine the relation of serum uric acid level to incident coronary heart disease, death from cardiovascular disease, and death from all causes.
Design
Community-based, prospective observational study.
Setting
Framingham, Massachusetts.
Patients
6763 Framingham Heart Study participants (mean age, 47 years).
Measurements
Serum uric acid level at baseline (1971 to 1976); event rates per 1000 person-years by sex-specific uric acid quintile.
Results
During 117 376 person-years of follow-up, 617 coronary heart disease events, 429 cardiovascular disease deaths, and 1460 deaths from all causes occurred. In men, after adjustment for age, elevated serum uric acid level was not associated with increased risk for an adverse outcome. In women, after adjustment for age, uric acid level was predictive of coronary heart disease (P = 0.002), death from cardiovascular disease (P = 0.009), and death from all causes (P = 0.03). After additional adjustment for cardiovascular disease risk factors, uric acid level was no longer associated with coronary heart disease, death from cardiovascular disease, or death from all causes. In a stepwise Cox model, diuretic use was identified as the covariate responsible for rendering serum uric acid a statistically nonsignificant predictor of outcomes.
Conclusions
These findings indicate that uric acid does not have a causal role in the development of coronary heart disease, death from cardiovascular disease, or death from all causes. Any apparent association with these outcomes is probably due to the association of uric acid level with other risk factors.
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