Dietary magnesium intake, serum high sensitivity C-reactive protein and the risk of incident knee osteoarthritis leading to hospitalization—A cohort study of 4,953 Finns

PLoS ONE
Q1
Mar 2019
Citations:23
Influential Citations:1
Observational Studies (Human)
81
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Enhanced Details

Methods
Prospective cohort study within the Finnish Health 2000 Survey. 4,953 adults aged 30+ without knee or hip OA at baseline were followed for up to 10 years (to 2010) for incident knee OA leading to hospitalization. Dietary magnesium intake assessed by a validated self-administered FFQ; baseline high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP) measured. Cox proportional hazards models estimated risk of incident knee OA across dietary Mg intake tertiles, adjusting for age, gender, energy intake, BMI, history of heavy physical work, leisure-time physical activity, injuries, knee complaints, use of Mg supplements, and serum hs-CRP.
Results
Dietary Mg intake at baseline was not associated with reduced risk of incident knee OA leading to hospitalization over ~10 years. In models adjusted for age, gender and energy intake, HRs for incident knee OA across Mg intake tertiles were 1.00, 1.21 (0.74–1.99), 1.40 (0.74–2.63); p for trend = 0.30. After excluding Mg supplement users, HRs were 1.00, 1.28 (0.78–2.10), 1.38 (0.73–2.62); p for trend = 0.31. Baseline hs-CRP did not predict incident knee OA after full adjustment. Mg intake was inversely associated with hs-CRP. Authors conclude that low dietary Mg intake does not contribute to incident clinical knee OA, though Mg intake is inversely associated with hs-CRP, indicating a potential anti-inflammatory link that did not translate into lower OA risk.
Limitations
Weak statistical power with wide confidence intervals; outcome captured only hospitalized knee OA (not all OA cases); potential residual confounding; dietary Mg assessed by FFQ with possible misreporting; cannot distinguish primary vs secondary OA; small number of participants with low Mg intake; generalizability may be limited.

Abstract

Objectives To study whether low dietary magnesium (Mg) intake and serum high sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP) predict the development of clinical knee osteoarthritis (OA). Methods The cohort consisted of 4,953 participants of a national health...