Wedick Nicole M, Barrett-Connor Elizabeth, Knoke James D, Wingard Deborah L
Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093, USA.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2002 Nov;50(11):1810-5. doi: 10.1046/j.1532-5415.2002.50509.x.
To examine the relationship between measured weight change over an approximate 10-year time period on all-cause mortality over the following 12 years in 1,801 community-dwelling men and women (mean age 71 at the beginning of mortality follow-up) with and without diabetes mellitus.
A longitudinal cohort study.
A geographically defined community in southern California.
One thousand eight hundred one older men and women with and without diabetes mellitus.
Weight, body mass index (BMI), blood pressure, and fasting plasma glucose were measured in 1972-74 (Visit 1) when participants were aged 40 to 79 and again in 1984-87 (Visit 2). Lifetime weight history and dieting for weight control were ascertained in 1985 using a mailed questionnaire. Vital status was determined for the next 12 years, from Visit 2 (1984-87) through 1996. The Cox proportional hazards model was used to assess the age- and multiply adjusted effect of weight change on mortality.
At Visit 1, diabetic men (n = 140) and women (n = 90) were more overweight than nondiabetic men (n = 633) and women (n = 938). Weight gain between Visits 1 and 2 was not a significant predictor of mortality in this cohort. Men and women losing 10 or more pounds between visits had higher age-adjusted death rates during the following 12 years than those with stable weight or weight gain. Weight loss was associated with an increased hazard ratio (HR) for all-cause mortality in nondiabetic men (HR = 1.38, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.06-1.80) and women (HR = 1.76, 95% CI = 1.33-2.34) and diabetic men (HR = 3.66, 95% CI = 2.15-6.24) and women (HR = 1.65, 95% CI = 0.70-3.87) after adjustment for age, smoking, and sedentary lifestyle. Significant associations persisted in analyses excluding cigarette smokers and those with depressed mood and low baseline BMI. After excluding those who died within 5 years of the weight loss, the increased HR was statistically significant in men and women with and without diabetes mellitus. Stratified analyses comparing those who reported dieting for weight control with those not dieting showed similar trends, with a higher mortality risk for weight loss in those who lost weight without dieting.
In this population of older individuals, weight loss predicted increased all-cause mortality risk not explained by covariates.
研究1801名社区居住的男性和女性(死亡率随访开始时平均年龄为71岁)在大约10年时间内测量的体重变化与接下来12年全因死亡率之间的关系,这些人患有或未患有糖尿病。
纵向队列研究。
南加州一个地理上界定的社区。
1801名患有或未患有糖尿病的老年男性和女性。
在1972 - 1974年(第1次访视),当参与者年龄在40至79岁时测量体重、体重指数(BMI)、血压和空腹血糖,1984 - 1987年(第2次访视)再次测量。1985年通过邮寄问卷确定终生体重史和为控制体重而节食的情况。从第2次访视(1984 - 1987年)到1996年确定接下来12年的生命状态。使用Cox比例风险模型评估体重变化对死亡率的年龄调整和多重调整效应。
在第1次访视时,糖尿病男性(n = 140)和女性(n = 90)比非糖尿病男性(n = 633)和女性(n = 938)超重更明显。在该队列中,第1次和第2次访视之间的体重增加不是死亡率的显著预测因素。在两次访视之间体重减轻10磅或更多的男性和女性,在接下来12年中的年龄调整死亡率高于体重稳定或体重增加的人。在调整年龄、吸烟和久坐不动的生活方式后,体重减轻与非糖尿病男性(风险比[HR] = 1.38,95%置信区间[CI] = 1.06 - 1.80)、女性(HR = 1.76,95% CI = 1.33 - 2.34)、糖尿病男性(HR = 3.66,95% CI = 2.15 - 6.24)和女性(HR = 1.65,95% CI = 0.70 - 3.87)的全因死亡率增加相关。在排除吸烟者以及情绪低落和基线BMI较低的人后,显著关联仍然存在。在排除体重减轻后5年内死亡的人后,无论有无糖尿病,男性和女性中增加的HR在统计学上均显著。分层分析比较报告为控制体重而节食的人与未节食的人,显示出类似趋势,即未节食而体重减轻的人死亡率风险更高。
在这个老年人群体中,体重减轻预示着全因死亡率风险增加,且这种增加不能由协变量解释。