Wannamethee G, Shaper A G
Department of Clinical Epidemiology and General Practice, Royal Free Hospital School of Medicine, London.
BMJ. 1989 Dec 16;299(6714):1497-502. doi: 10.1136/bmj.299.6714.1497.
To assess the relation between body mass index and mortality in middle aged British men.
Men who were recruited for the British Regional Heart Study were followed up for a mean of nine years.
General practices in 24 British towns.
7735 Men aged 40-59 years selected from the age-sex registers of one group practice in each of the 24 towns.
Mortality from cardiovascular and non-cardiovascular causes.
660 Of the men died. There was a U-shaped relation between body mass index and total mortality. Very lean men (less than 20 kg/m2) had by far the highest mortality followed by lean men (20-22 kg/m2) and obese men (greater than or equal to 28 kg/m2). The high mortality in lean and very lean men was due largely to non-cardiovascular causes, particularly lung cancer and respiratory disease, which are associated with cigarette smoking. In obese men deaths were more likely to be due to cardiovascular causes. There was a strong inverse association between body weight and cigarette smoking. When the pattern of mortality was examined by age, smoking habits, and pre-existing smoking related disease both very lean men and obese men consistently had an increased mortality. The U-shaped relation was most prominent in men in the oldest age group (55-59). Current smokers had a higher mortality than former smokers at virtually all values of body mass index. An increased mortality in lean men was seen only in current smokers and in men with smoking related disease. Among men who had never smoked, lean men had the lowest total mortality, thereafter mortality increased with increasing body mass index (p less than 0.01).
This study provides strong evidence of the impact of cigarette smoking on body weight and mortality and strongly suggests that the benefits of giving up smoking are far greater than the problems associated with the increase in weight that may occur.
评估英国中年男性体重指数与死亡率之间的关系。
对入选英国地区心脏研究的男性进行了平均九年的随访。
英国24个城镇的全科医疗诊所。
从24个城镇中每个城镇的一组诊所的年龄-性别登记册中选取的7735名40至59岁的男性。
心血管疾病和非心血管疾病导致的死亡率。
660名男性死亡。体重指数与总死亡率之间呈U形关系。极瘦的男性(体重指数低于20kg/m²)死亡率最高,其次是瘦男性(体重指数2-22kg/m²)和肥胖男性(体重指数大于或等于28kg/m²)。瘦和极瘦男性的高死亡率主要归因于非心血管疾病,尤其是肺癌和呼吸系统疾病,这些与吸烟有关。肥胖男性的死亡更可能归因于心血管疾病。体重与吸烟之间存在强烈的负相关。按年龄、吸烟习惯和既往吸烟相关疾病检查死亡率模式时,极瘦男性和肥胖男性的死亡率持续增加。U形关系在最年长年龄组(55-59岁)的男性中最为明显。在几乎所有体重指数值下,当前吸烟者的死亡率都高于既往吸烟者。仅在当前吸烟者和患有吸烟相关疾病的男性中观察到瘦男性死亡率增加。在从不吸烟的男性中,瘦男性的总死亡率最低,此后死亡率随体重指数增加而升高(p<0.01)。
本研究提供了强有力的证据证明吸烟对体重和死亡率的影响,并强烈表明戒烟的益处远大于可能出现的体重增加相关问题。