National Center for Health Statistics, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 3311 Toledo Rd, Room 4336, Hyattsville, MD 20782, USA.
JAMA. 2013 Jan 2;309(1):71-82. doi: 10.1001/jama.2012.113905.
Estimates of the relative mortality risks associated with normal weight, overweight, and obesity may help to inform decision making in the clinical setting.
To perform a systematic review of reported hazard ratios (HRs) of all-cause mortality for overweight and obesity relative to normal weight in the general population.
PubMed and EMBASE electronic databases were searched through September 30, 2012, without language restrictions.
Articles that reported HRs for all-cause mortality using standard body mass index (BMI) categories from prospective studies of general populations of adults were selected by consensus among multiple reviewers. Studies were excluded that used nonstandard categories or that were limited to adolescents or to those with specific medical conditions or to those undergoing specific procedures. PubMed searches yielded 7034 articles, of which 141 (2.0%) were eligible. An EMBASE search yielded 2 additional articles. After eliminating overlap, 97 studies were retained for analysis, providing a combined sample size of more than 2.88 million individuals and more than 270,000 deaths.
Data were extracted by 1 reviewer and then reviewed by 3 independent reviewers. We selected the most complex model available for the full sample and used a variety of sensitivity analyses to address issues of possible overadjustment (adjusted for factors in causal pathway) or underadjustment (not adjusted for at least age, sex, and smoking).
Random-effects summary all-cause mortality HRs for overweight (BMI of 25-<30), obesity (BMI of ≥30), grade 1 obesity (BMI of 30-<35), and grades 2 and 3 obesity (BMI of ≥35) were calculated relative to normal weight (BMI of 18.5-<25). The summary HRs were 0.94 (95% CI, 0.91-0.96) for overweight, 1.18 (95% CI, 1.12-1.25) for obesity (all grades combined), 0.95 (95% CI, 0.88-1.01) for grade 1 obesity, and 1.29 (95% CI, 1.18-1.41) for grades 2 and 3 obesity. These findings persisted when limited to studies with measured weight and height that were considered to be adequately adjusted. The HRs tended to be higher when weight and height were self-reported rather than measured.
Relative to normal weight, both obesity (all grades) and grades 2 and 3 obesity were associated with significantly higher all-cause mortality. Grade 1 obesity overall was not associated with higher mortality, and overweight was associated with significantly lower all-cause mortality. The use of predefined standard BMI groupings can facilitate between-study comparisons.
超重、肥胖与正常体重相关的相对死亡风险估计值可能有助于为临床决策提供信息。
系统评价普通人群中超重和肥胖与正常体重相关的全因死亡率的报告危害比(HRs)。
通过 2012 年 9 月 30 日在 PubMed 和 EMBASE 电子数据库中进行检索,无语言限制。
通过多位评审员的共识,选择使用标准体重指数(BMI)类别报告全因死亡率的 HRs 的前瞻性普通成年人群研究的文章。排除使用非标准类别或仅限于青少年或特定医疗条件或特定程序的文章。PubMed 检索得到 7034 篇文章,其中 141 篇(2.0%)符合条件。EMBASE 搜索产生了另外 2 篇文章。消除重叠后,有 97 项研究被保留用于分析,总样本量超过 288 万人,死亡人数超过 27 万。
由 1 名评审员提取数据,然后由 3 名独立评审员进行审查。我们选择了完整样本中可用的最复杂模型,并使用各种敏感性分析来解决可能过度调整(调整了因果途径中的因素)或调整不足(至少未调整年龄、性别和吸烟)的问题。
超重(BMI 为 25-<30)、肥胖(BMI 为≥30)、1 级肥胖(BMI 为 30-<35)和 2 级和 3 级肥胖(BMI 为≥35)与正常体重(BMI 为 18.5-<25)相比,全因死亡率 HR 的随机效应汇总值。超重的汇总 HR 为 0.94(95%CI,0.91-0.96),肥胖(所有级别合计)为 1.18(95%CI,1.12-1.25),1 级肥胖为 0.95(95%CI,0.88-1.01),2 级和 3 级肥胖为 1.29(95%CI,1.18-1.41)。当仅限于考虑到体重和身高的测量值并且认为这些值调整充分的研究时,这些发现仍然存在。当体重和身高是自我报告而不是测量值时,HR 往往更高。
与正常体重相比,肥胖(所有级别)和 2 级和 3 级肥胖与全因死亡率显著升高相关。整体而言,1 级肥胖与死亡率升高无关,而超重与全因死亡率显著降低相关。使用预定义的标准 BMI 分组可以促进研究之间的比较。