Freiberg Matthew S, Pencina Michael J, D'Agostino Ralph B, Lanier Katherine, Wilson Peter W F, Vasan Ramachandran S
Center for Research on Health Care, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Obesity (Silver Spring). 2008 Feb;16(2):463-9. doi: 10.1038/oby.2007.75.
Current guidelines recommend measurement of both BMI and waist circumference (WC) in individuals with BMI between 25.0 and 34.9 kg/m(2). We investigated the relative contributions of BMI and WC toward identifying risk of adverse vascular events in a community-based sample.
We evaluated Framingham Study participants (n = 4,195 person-examinations, 53% women) using pooled logistic regression to assess the incremental prognostic utility of WC in predicting risk of a first cardiovascular disease (CVD) event in the three BMI categories (normal, <25 kg/m(2); overweight, 25 to <30 kg/m(2); obese, > or =30 kg/m(2)) and to assess the incremental prognostic utility of BMI and WC separately for predicting risk of a first cardiovascular event.
On follow-up (16 years), 430 participants (158 women) had experienced a first CVD event. In overweight women, but not in overweight men, larger WC was found to be an independent predictor of CVD incidence, longitudinally (in women, multivariable-adjusted odds ratio (OR) per s.d. increment in WC 1.86, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.03-3.36, P = 0.04; in men adjusted OR per s.d. increment in WC 0.91, 95% CI 0.60-1.38, P = 0.66). In obese individuals and in those with normal BMI, WC was not associated independently with incident CVD. When BMI and WC were analyzed separately for predicting risk of a first cardiovascular event, the c statistics associated with the multivariable CVD models incorporating BMI vs. WC were nearly identical in men and women.
Knowledge of WC aids identification of vascular risk among overweight women. Among normal weight or obese women and men (regardless of BMI category) WC did not appear to substantially add to prediction of risk of vascular events.
当前指南建议对体重指数(BMI)在25.0至34.9kg/m²之间的个体同时测量BMI和腰围(WC)。我们在一个基于社区的样本中研究了BMI和WC对识别不良血管事件风险的相对贡献。
我们评估了弗雷明汉研究参与者(4195人次检查,53%为女性),使用汇总逻辑回归来评估WC在预测三个BMI类别(正常,<25kg/m²;超重,25至<30kg/m²;肥胖,≥30kg/m²)首次心血管疾病(CVD)事件风险中的增量预后效用,并分别评估BMI和WC在预测首次心血管事件风险中的增量预后效用。
在随访(16年)期间,430名参与者(158名女性)经历了首次CVD事件。在超重女性中,但不在超重男性中,发现较大的WC是CVD发病率的独立预测因素,从纵向来看(在女性中,WC每标准差增加的多变量调整比值比(OR)为1.86,95%置信区间(CI)=1.03 - 3.36,P = 0.04;在男性中,WC每标准差增加的调整OR为0.91,95%CI为0.60 - 1.38,P = 0.66)。在肥胖个体和BMI正常的个体中,WC与CVD发病没有独立关联。当分别分析BMI和WC以预测首次心血管事件的风险时,纳入BMI与WC的多变量CVD模型的c统计量在男性和女性中几乎相同。
了解WC有助于识别超重女性的血管风险。在正常体重或肥胖的女性和男性中(无论BMI类别如何),WC似乎并没有显著增加血管事件风险的预测。