O'Reilly Éilis J, Wang Molin, Adami Hans-Olov, Alonso Alvaro, Bernstein Leslie, van den Brandt Piet, Buring Julie, Daugherty Sarah, Deapen Dennis, Freedman D Michal, English Dallas R, Giles Graham G, Håkansson Niclas, Kurth Tobias, Schairer Catherine, Weiderpass Elisabete, Wolk Alicja, Smith-Warner Stephanie A
a Department of Nutrition , Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health , Boston , MA , USA.
b School of Public Health, College of Medicine , University College Cork , Cork , Ireland.
Amyotroph Lateral Scler Frontotemporal Degener. 2018 Aug;19(5-6):396-406. doi: 10.1080/21678421.2018.1452944. Epub 2018 Apr 16.
Using pooled multivariable-adjusted rate ratios (RR), we explored relationships between prediagnostic body-mass-index (BMI), waist-to-hip-ratio (WHR), and weight-gain during adulthood, and ALS in 419,894 women and 148,166 men from 10 community-based cohorts in USA, Europe, and Australia; 428 ALS deaths were documented in women and 204 in men.
Higher mid-to-later adulthood BMI was associated with lower ALS mortality. For 5 kg/m increased BMI, the rate was 15% lower (95% confidence interval [CI]: 4-24%; p = 0.005). Although a clear linear trend was not evident for WHR at enrollment (p = 0.099) individuals in the highest cohort-specific quartile had 27% (95% CI: 0-47%; p = 0.053) lower ALS compared to those in the lowest. BMI in early adulthood did not predict ALS; fewer than 10% of participants had early adulthood BMI >25 kg/m, limiting power. Weight-gain during adulthood was strongly associated with lower ALS; for an additional 1kg gain in weight/year, the RR = 0.43 (95% CI: 0.28-0.65; p < 0.001). Associations persisted when adjusted for diabetes at enrollment, restricted to never-smokers, and ALS deaths in the 5 years after enrollment were excluded (accounting for recent weight loss).
These findings confirm somewhat conflicting, underpowered evidence that adiposity is inversely associated with ALS. We newly demonstrate that weight-gain during adulthood is strongly predictive of lower ALS risk.
我们使用汇总的多变量调整率比(RR),探讨了成年期诊断前体重指数(BMI)、腰臀比(WHR)和体重增加与美国、欧洲和澳大利亚10个社区队列中419894名女性和148166名男性肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS)之间的关系;记录到女性有428例ALS死亡,男性有204例。
成年中后期较高的BMI与较低的ALS死亡率相关。BMI每增加5kg/m²,死亡率降低15%(95%置信区间[CI]:4%-24%;p = 0.005)。尽管入组时WHR没有明显的线性趋势(p = 0.099),但最高队列特定四分位数的个体与最低四分位数的个体相比,ALS风险降低27%(95% CI:0%-47%;p = 0.053)。成年早期的BMI不能预测ALS;不到10%的参与者成年早期BMI>25kg/m²,限制了检验效能。成年期体重增加与较低的ALS密切相关;体重每年额外增加1kg,RR = 0.43(95% CI:0.28-0.65;p < 0.001)。在校正入组时的糖尿病、限制为从不吸烟者以及排除入组后5年内的ALS死亡(考虑近期体重减轻)后,相关性仍然存在。
这些发现证实了肥胖与ALS呈负相关这一有些矛盾且检验效能不足的证据。我们首次证明成年期体重增加强烈预示着较低的ALS风险。