Journal of Personalized Medicine (Apr 2022)

Incident Rheumatoid Arthritis Following Statin Use: From the View of a National Cohort Study in Korea

  • Mi Jung Kwon,
  • Joo-Hee Kim,
  • Ji Hee Kim,
  • Hye-Rim Park,
  • Nan Young Kim,
  • Sangkyoon Hong,
  • Hyo Geun Choi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm12040559
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 4
p. 559

Abstract

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Safety issues regarding the potential risk of statins and incident rheumatoid arthritis (RA) have been raised, but the existing data are largely based on Caucasian populations, and continue to have biases and require further validation in Asian populations. Here, we aimed to verify the risk of RA depending on the duration of previous statin use and statin types using a large-scale, nationwide database. This study enrolled 3149 patients with RA and 12,596 matched non-RA participants from the national health insurance database (2002–2015), and investigated their statin prescription histories for two years before the index date. Propensity score overlap-weighted logistic regression was applied after adjusting for multiple covariates. The prior use of any statins and, specifically, the long-term use of lipophilic statins (>365 days) were related to a lower likelihood of developing RA ((odds ratio (OR) = 0.73; 95% confidence intervals (CI) = 0.63–0.85, p p < 0.001), respectively). Subgroup analyses supported these preventive effects on RA in those with dyslipidemia, independent of sex, age, smoking, alcohol use, hypertension, and hyperglycemia. Hydrophilic statin use or short-term use showed no such associations. Our study suggests that prior statin use, especially long-term lipophilic statin use, appears to confer preventive benefits against RA.

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