Institute of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan.
Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Imperial College London, United Kingdom.
Clin Infect Dis. 2018 Feb 10;66(5):699-705. doi: 10.1093/cid/cix852.
Mounting data have revealed that body mass index (BMI) is inversely associated with risk of active tuberculosis. The inverse association presents a "paradox" with regard to diabetes, because obesity is a major determinant of diabetes, and diabetes is a well-known risk factor for tuberculosis.
We conducted 2 population-based cohort studies involving 167392 participants. The main exposure was BMI and diabetes ascertained at baseline. Occurrence of incident tuberculosis was ascertained from Taiwan's National Tuberculosis Registry. We conducted a causal mediation analysis and a joint effects analysis to characterize the relationship between BMI, diabetes, and tuberculosis.
During a median of >7 years of follow-up, 491 individuals developed incident tuberculosis. Compared with normal-weight individuals, obese individuals (>30 kg/m2) had a 67% (95% confidence interval [CI], -3% to -90%) and 64% (31%-81%) reduction in tuberculosis hazard in the 2 cohorts. In the causal mediation analysis, obesity had a harmful effect on tuberculosis mediated through diabetes (0.8% and 2.7% increased odds in the 2 cohorts, respectively) but had a strongly protective effect not mediated through diabetes (72% and 67% decreased odds, respectively). Individuals who were simultaneously obese and diabetic had a lower but statistically insignificant risk of tuberculosis (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.30; 95% CI, .08-1.22) compared with nondiabetic normal-weight individuals.
Our analyses revealed that the relationship between obesity, diabetes, and risk of tuberculosis was complex and nonlinear. Better understanding of the interplay between host metabolism and tuberculosis immunology may lead to novel therapeutic or preventive strategies.
越来越多的数据表明,体质指数(BMI)与活动性结核病的风险呈负相关。这种负相关在糖尿病方面呈现出一种“悖论”,因为肥胖是糖尿病的主要决定因素,而糖尿病是结核病的一个已知危险因素。
我们进行了两项基于人群的队列研究,共纳入了 167392 名参与者。主要暴露因素为基线时的 BMI 和糖尿病。通过台湾国家结核病登记处确定结核病的发病情况。我们进行了因果中介分析和联合效应分析,以描述 BMI、糖尿病和结核病之间的关系。
在中位随访时间超过 7 年期间,有 491 人发生了结核病。与正常体重者相比,肥胖者(>30kg/m2)在这两个队列中的结核病发病风险分别降低了 67%(95%置信区间[CI],-3%至-90%)和 64%(31%-81%)。在因果中介分析中,肥胖通过糖尿病对结核病产生有害影响(两个队列中分别增加了 0.8%和 2.7%的患病几率),但通过非糖尿病途径对结核病具有强烈的保护作用(分别降低了 72%和 67%的患病几率)。同时肥胖和患有糖尿病的个体结核病发病风险较低,但无统计学意义(调整后的发病风险比,0.30;95%CI,0.08-1.22),与非糖尿病正常体重者相比。
我们的分析表明,肥胖、糖尿病和结核病风险之间的关系是复杂和非线性的。更好地理解宿主代谢和结核病免疫学之间的相互作用可能会导致新的治疗或预防策略。