Skip to main content
. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2022 Mar 1.
Published in final edited form as: Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken). 2021 Mar;73(3):318–327. doi: 10.1002/acr.24252

Table 2.

Weight change from young adulthood to midlife and risk of developing an arthritis conditions, NHANES 1988–1994 & 1999–2016 (n=13,669)

Weight Changea Number of Incident Arthritis Conditionsb Incidence (95% CI)c HR (95% CI)d P value

Normal-normal 783 23.3 (21.7–25.0) Ref -
Normal-overweight 1071 28.2 (26.6–30.0) 1.27 (1.10–1.46) 0.001
Normal-obese 554 40.6 (37.3–44.1) 1.73 (1.48–2.02) <0.001
Overweight-normal 50 22.2 (16.8–29.3) 1.06 (0.76–1.47) 0.752
Overweight-overweight 333 22.8 (20.5–25.4) 1.12 (0.93–1.35) 0.229
Overweight-obese 539 38.8 (35.6–42.2) 2.00 (1.71–2.34) <0.001
Obese-normal - - - -
Obese-overweight 31 26.8 (18.9–38.2) 1.13 (0.68–1.87) 0.634
Obese-obese 238 40.0 (35.2–45.4) 2.08 (1.73–2.51) <0.001
a

Weight change categories based on BMI at age 25 (young adulthood) and BMI 10 years prior to the survey (midlife). Weight change categories are defined in Table S1.

b

Incident arthritis conditions reflects the number of new arthritis conditions that occurred over the 10-years of follow-up from the recalled midlife weight measure to the time of survey.

c

Arthritis conditions incidence rate per 1,000 person-years. Incidence rates are unadjusted.

d

Hazard of developing an arthritis condition, using normal-normal as the reference group. The Cox proportional hazard model was sample weighted and adjusted for categorical age at the midlife measure, gender, race/ethnicity, education level at survey, smoking status at the midlife measure, and survey year.

- indicates HR was suppressed because there were less than 10 incident cases in this group.