Graduate School of Comprehensive Human Sciences, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan.
Int J Obes (Lond). 2011 Aug;35(8):1056-62. doi: 10.1038/ijo.2010.226. Epub 2010 Nov 2.
Although some prospective cohort studies have shown that baseline BMI is positively associated with a future incident risk for hypertension, these studies do not account for weight changes during the observation period. Therefore, it is not evident whether future incident risk for hypertension in obese, non-hypertensive people increases when their weight remains stable. We examined the association between long-term weight stability and risk for developing hypertension.
A total of 5201 Japanese male workers aged 30-59 years underwent health checkups in 2002 and were followed through 2006. To consider transitions in covariates during the follow-up period, we used a time-dependent covariate Cox proportional hazard model to compute the relative risks (RRs) of incident hypertension. Furthermore, as a complementary analysis, we restricted the data to individuals whose BMI remained unchanged (± 5% of baseline BMI) during the follow-up and compared the RRs between BMI categories.
During the follow-up, there were 899 newly diagnosed cases of hypertension among the 5201 men (14,888 person-years). Mean change in BMI during the follow-up period of all subjects was 0.2 ± 1.1 kg/m(2) (range: -6.6 to 6.3 kg/m(2)). The multivariate RRs for hypertension increased as BMI increased when we applied the time-dependent covariate Cox proportional hazard model. The complementary analysis showed that the multivariate RR (confidence interval) within the ≥ 27.0 kg/m(2) BMI category was 1.43 (1.16-1.77) times higher than the reference of 23.0-24.9 kg/m(2), whereas the RR for the <21.0 kg/m(2) BMI category was 0.63 (0.51-0.79) times lower than the reference.
A higher baseline BMI increases future incident risk for hypertension even when there has been no major weight increase. Weight management should be encouraged for obese, non-hypertensive people to prevent future hypertension.
尽管一些前瞻性队列研究表明,基线 BMI 与未来高血压发病风险呈正相关,但这些研究并未考虑观察期间的体重变化。因此,尚不清楚肥胖但非高血压人群的体重保持稳定时,其未来高血压发病风险是否会增加。我们研究了长期体重稳定与高血压发病风险之间的关系。
共有 5201 名年龄在 30-59 岁的日本男性工人在 2002 年接受了健康检查,并在 2006 年进行了随访。为了考虑随访期间协变量的变化,我们使用时间依赖性协变量 Cox 比例风险模型计算了高血压发病的相对风险 (RR)。此外,作为补充分析,我们将数据限制在 BMI 在随访期间保持不变(±基线 BMI 的 5%)的个体中,并比较了 BMI 类别之间的 RR。
在随访期间,5201 名男性中有 899 人被新诊断为高血压(14888 人年)。所有受试者在随访期间的 BMI 平均变化为 0.2±1.1kg/m2(范围:-6.6 至 6.3kg/m2)。当我们应用时间依赖性协变量 Cox 比例风险模型时,RR 随着 BMI 的增加而增加。补充分析显示,≥27.0kg/m2BMI 类别的多变量 RR(置信区间)比参考值 23.0-24.9kg/m2高 1.43(1.16-1.77)倍,而<21.0kg/m2BMI 类别的 RR 比参考值低 0.63(0.51-0.79)倍。
较高的基线 BMI 即使在体重没有明显增加的情况下,也会增加未来高血压发病的风险。应鼓励肥胖但非高血压人群进行体重管理,以预防未来的高血压。