Low Serum Uric Acid Predicts Risk of a Composite Disease Endpoint

Mortality may increase in hypouricemia as well as inhyperuricemia. We assessed the predictive value of low serum uric acid (SUA) levels on the risk of overall mortality or a composite endpoint of death and nonfatal events. In 1013 community-based middle-aged adults, free of uncontrolled diabetes and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medicina (Kaunas, Lithuania) Lithuania), 2021-04, Vol.57 (4), p.361
Hauptverfasser: Özpamuk-Karadeniz, Fatma, Karadeniz, Yusuf, Kaya, Adnan, Altay, Servet, Can, Günay, Onat, Altan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Mortality may increase in hypouricemia as well as inhyperuricemia. We assessed the predictive value of low serum uric acid (SUA) levels on the risk of overall mortality or a composite endpoint of death and nonfatal events. In 1013 community-based middle-aged adults, free of uncontrolled diabetes and coronary heart disease at baseline, the association of sex-specific SUA tertiles with defined outcomes was evaluated prospectively by logistic regression, stratified to gender and presence of type-2 diabetes, using recent criteria. : Totally, 43 deaths and additional incident nonfatal events in 157 cases were recorded at a median 3.4 years' follow-up. Multivariable linear regression disclosed SUA to be significantly associated among non-diabetic individuals positively with creatinine, triglycerides, and body mass index in women further with fasted glucose. In multivariable-adjusted logistic regression analysis, sex-specifically dichotomized baseline uric acid (
ISSN:1648-9144
1010-660X
1648-9144
DOI:10.3390/medicina57040361