Insulin Resistance & Arthritis — USA & UK 1975–2022

Insulin Resistance & Arthritis

Prevalence trajectories in the USA and United Kingdom, 1975–2022. Combining osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis (all diagnosed arthritis). Ageing populations contribute independently to arthritis burden, but the metabolic-inflammatory pathway through insulin resistance is increasingly recognised as a significant driver beyond age alone.

Why the two curves don't track each other exactly — even when the correlation is very high:

The solid line shows the percentage of adults with insulin resistance across the entire population — everyone with measurable insulin resistance, regardless of what condition it causes them. Because insulin resistance is the upstream root cause of many different diseases — type 2 diabetes, fatty liver, cognitive decline, cardiovascular disease and more — this curve rises relatively gradually as it reflects a burden shared across all of those outcomes.

The dotted line shows the prevalence of the specific condition studied on this page — in this case, only the people for whom insulin resistance has expressed itself as that particular disease. This curve can rise more steeply because it captures decades of accumulated cases: someone may develop insulin resistance at 35 but not manifest this condition until their 50s, so even a modest early rise in insulin resistance translates into a much larger rise in diagnosed cases years later.

The r value (e.g. r = 0.97) is a correlation coefficient. It doesn't measure whether the two lines are the same height — it measures how consistently they move together over time. An r of 0.97 means that 97% of the rise in this condition over the past five decades is statistically explained by the parallel rise in insulin resistance.

What the r value tells you:
0.50–0.70 — Modest connection. The two trends are related but many other factors are involved.
0.70–0.90 — Strong connection. Insulin resistance is a major driver, alongside other contributing causes.
0.90 and above — Dominant connection. Insulin resistance accounts for the overwhelming majority of the trend. At this level, it is difficult to argue that other factors are primarily responsible. The values seen across these studies — consistently 0.90 to 0.97 — place insulin resistance firmly in this category for every condition shown.

United States

USA — Insulin Resistance vs Arthritis

1975 – 2022  |  % of adults
Insulin Resistance
Arthritis Diagnosed
United Kingdom

UK — Insulin Resistance vs Arthritis

1975 – 2022  |  % of adults
Insulin Resistance
Arthritis Diagnosed
r = 0.87
USA
IR ↔ Arthritis
r = 0.83
UK
IR ↔ Arthritis
58M
USA adults with
arthritis (2022)
~10M
UK adults with
arthritis (2022)
Age confounding: Arthritis prevalence is strongly age-related, and both countries have ageing populations which independently drive numbers upward — making the arthritis correlation harder to isolate than for T2DM or IBD. However, research clearly shows that insulin resistance drives systemic inflammation that accelerates cartilage degradation in osteoarthritis and amplifies autoimmune activity in rheumatoid arthritis, independently of age. Obesity-related osteoarthritis (strongly linked to IR) now accounts for a significant share of new cases in adults under 50.
Mechanistic pathway: Hyperinsulinaemia elevates IGF-1, promotes synovial inflammation, and drives adipokine dysregulation — all of which directly damage joint tissue. Reducing insulin resistance through dietary intervention measurably reduces inflammatory markers (CRP, IL-6) associated with arthritis progression. The Arthritis Foundation now recognises insulin resistance and metabolic syndrome as modifiable risk factors.
Data sources
Arthritis USA: CDC NHIS 1975–2022 (diagnosed arthritis: gout, OA, RA, fibromyalgia, lupus). Prevalence: ~14% (1975) → 22% (2002) → 18.9% age-adjusted (2022). CDC National Arthritis Data Workgroup; Arthritis Care & Research 2019.
https://www.cdc.gov/arthritis/data_statistics/national-statistics.html
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/databriefs/db497.htm
Arthritis UK: Versus Arthritis national prevalence reports; NHS Digital musculoskeletal data 1990–2022; CPRD OA trends study (Swain et al. 2020, 1997–2017). Overall diagnosed arthritis ~15–18% of adults.
https://www.versusarthritis.org/about-arthritis/data-and-statistics/
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32184134/
Global OA/RA burden: GBD Study 2021 — OA and RA burden 1990–2020 (Lancet Rheumatology 2023). Global OA prevalence increased 132.2% since 1990.
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanrhe/article/PIIS2665-9913(23)00163-7/fulltext
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