Nutrients (Jul 2024)

Association between Uric Acid Levels and the Consumption of Sugar-Sweetened Carbonated Beverages in the Korean Population: The 2016 Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey

  • Su Min Lee,
  • Sang Yeoup Lee,
  • Eun Ju Park,
  • Young In Lee,
  • Jung In Choi,
  • Sae Rom Lee,
  • Ryuk Jun Kwon,
  • Soo Min Son,
  • Jeong Gyu Lee,
  • Yu Hyeon Yi,
  • Young Jin Tak,
  • Seung Hun Lee,
  • Gyu Lee Kim,
  • Young Jin Ra,
  • Young Hye Cho

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16132167
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 13
p. 2167

Abstract

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Elevated uric acid levels are linked with obesity and diabetes. Existing research mainly examines the relationship between sugar-sweetened carbonated beverage (SSB) consumption and uric acid levels. This study explored the association between the quantity and frequency of SSB consumption and elevated uric acid levels in Korean adults. Data from 2881 participants aged 19–64 years (1066 men and 1815 women) in the 2016 Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey were analyzed. Serum uric acid levels were categorized into quartiles, with the highest defined as high uric acid (men, ≥6.7 mg/dL; women, ≥4.8 mg/dL). SSB consumption was classified into quartiles (almost never, <1 cup (<200 mL), 1–3 cups (200–600 mL), ≥3 cups (≥600 mL)) and frequency into tertiles (almost never, ≤1/week, ≥2/week). Multivariate logistic regression assessed the association, with separate analyses for men and women. Increased daily SSB consumption and frequency were significantly associated with high uric acid levels in men but not in women. After adjusting for sociodemographic and health characteristics, consuming ≥3 cups (≥600 mL) of SSBs per day and SSBs ≥ 2/week were significantly associated with high serum uric acid levels in men, but this association was not observed in women. The study concludes that increased SSB intake is linked to elevated uric acid levels in Korean men, but not in women.

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