Jordan John G, Mann Joshua R
Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, USA.
South Med J. 2010 Apr;103(4):323-30. doi: 10.1097/SMJ.0b013e3181d394b4.
The objective of this study was to determine the relationship between obesity and all-cause mortality among participants with obstructive lung disease in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III).
Public data from a retrospective cohort of the 33,994 participants in NHANES III was analyzed to determine the relationship between obesity and all-cause mortality among participants with obstructive lung disease. Results were analyzed using proportional hazard models and controlled for age, sex, race, smoking status, current oral corticosteroid use, and severity of airway obstruction. Secondary analysis considered time until death from respiratory disease or time until death from chronic lower respiratory disease (excluding asthma).
The subset used in the analysis consisted of 2439 persons with 844 documented deaths. Extreme obesity (body mass index [BMI] >40) was significantly associated with increased respiratory disease mortality (hazard ratio [HR] 5.78; 95% confidence interval {CI} [1.09 to 30.61]) and chronic lower respiratory disease mortality (HR 13.69; 95% CI [1.45 to 129.29]). In addition, underweight status (BMI <18.5) was significantly associated with increased all-cause mortality (HR 2.42; 95% CI [1.31 to 4.46]), respiratory disease mortality (HR 7.10; 95% CI [1.94 to 26.00]) and chronic lower respiratory disease mortality (HR 14.80; 95% CI [2.24 to 97.99]).
Underweight adults had increased risk of death from all causes and respiratory conditions, compared to class I obese adults. Extreme obesity was associated with increased risk of death from respiratory conditions, but not all-cause mortality. Additional research is needed to explain the complex relationship between BMI and specific causes of mortality in the context of pulmonary disease.
本研究的目的是在《美国国家健康与营养检查调查》(NHANES III)中确定阻塞性肺病参与者的肥胖与全因死亡率之间的关系。
分析了NHANES III中33994名参与者的回顾性队列的公共数据,以确定阻塞性肺病参与者的肥胖与全因死亡率之间的关系。使用比例风险模型分析结果,并对年龄、性别、种族、吸烟状况、当前口服皮质类固醇的使用情况以及气道阻塞的严重程度进行了控制。二次分析考虑了直至因呼吸系统疾病死亡的时间或直至因慢性下呼吸道疾病(不包括哮喘)死亡的时间。
分析中使用的子集包括2439人,其中有844例有记录的死亡。极度肥胖(体重指数[BMI]>40)与呼吸系统疾病死亡率增加(风险比[HR]5.78;95%置信区间{CI}[1.09至30.61])和慢性下呼吸道疾病死亡率增加(HR 13.69;95%CI[1.45至129.29])显著相关。此外,体重过轻状态(BMI<18.5)与全因死亡率增加(HR 2.42;95%CI[1.31至4.46])、呼吸系统疾病死亡率增加(HR 7.10;95%CI[1.94至26.00])和慢性下呼吸道疾病死亡率增加(HR 14.80;95%CI[2.24至97.99])显著相关。
与I类肥胖成年人相比,体重过轻的成年人全因死亡和呼吸系统疾病死亡风险增加。极度肥胖与呼吸系统疾病死亡风险增加相关,但与全因死亡率无关。需要进一步的研究来解释在肺病背景下BMI与特定死亡原因之间的复杂关系。