Department of Non-Communicable Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Department of Non-Communicable Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol. 2018 Dec;6(12):944-953. doi: 10.1016/S2213-8587(18)30288-2. Epub 2018 Oct 30.
BMI is known to be strongly associated with all-cause mortality, but few studies have been large enough to reliably examine associations between BMI and a comprehensive range of cause-specific mortality outcomes.
In this population-based cohort study, we used UK primary care data from the Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD) linked to national mortality registration data and fitted adjusted Cox regression models to examine associations between BMI and all-cause mortality, and between BMI and a comprehensive range of cause-specific mortality outcomes (recorded by International Classification of Diseases, 10th revision [ICD-10] codes). We included all individuals with BMI data collected at age 16 years and older and with subsequent follow-up time available. Follow-up began at whichever was the latest of: start of CPRD research-standard follow up, the 5-year anniversary of the first BMI record, or on Jan 1, 1998 (start date for death registration data); follow-up ended at death or on March 8, 2016. Fully adjusted models were stratified by sex and adjusted for baseline age, smoking, alcohol use, diabetes, index of multiple deprivation, and calendar period. Models were fitted in both never-smokers only and the full study population. We also did an extensive range of sensitivity analyses. The expected age of death for men and women aged 40 years at baseline, by BMI category, was estimated from a Poisson model including BMI, age, and sex.
3 632 674 people were included in the full study population; the following results are from the analysis of never-smokers, which comprised 1 969 648 people and 188 057 deaths. BMI had a J-shaped association with overall mortality; the estimated hazard ratio per 5 kg/m increase in BMI was 0·81 (95% CI 0·80-0·82) below 25 kg/m and 1·21 (1·20-1·22) above this point. BMI was associated with all cause of death categories except for transport-related accidents, but the shape of the association varied. Most causes, including cancer, cardiovascular diseases, and respiratory diseases, had a J-shaped association with BMI, with lowest risk occurring in the range 21-25 kg/m. For mental and behavioural, neurological, and accidental (non-transport-related) causes, BMI was inversely associated with mortality up to 24-27 kg/m, with little association at higher BMIs; for deaths from self-harm or interpersonal violence, an inverse linear association was observed. Associations between BMI and mortality were stronger at younger ages than at older ages, and the BMI associated with lowest mortality risk was higher in older individuals than in younger individuals. Compared with individuals of healthy weight (BMI 18·5-24·9 kg/m), life expectancy from age 40 years was 4·2 years shorter in obese (BMI ≥30·0 kg/m) men and 3·5 years shorter in obese women, and 4·3 years shorter in underweight (BMI <18·5 kg/m) men and 4·5 years shorter in underweight women. When smokers were included in analyses, results for most causes of death were broadly similar, although marginally stronger associations were seen among people with lower BMI, suggesting slight residual confounding by smoking.
BMI had J-shaped associations with overall mortality and most specific causes of death; for mental and behavioural, neurological, and external causes, lower BMI was associated with increased mortality risk.
Wellcome Trust.
体重指数(BMI)与全因死亡率密切相关,但很少有研究的规模足以可靠地检查 BMI 与各种特定原因死亡率之间的关系。
在这项基于人群的队列研究中,我们使用英国临床实践研究数据链(CPRD)中的初级保健数据,并与国家死亡率登记数据相关联,使用调整后的 Cox 回归模型来检查 BMI 与全因死亡率之间的关联,以及 BMI 与各种特定原因死亡率(由国际疾病分类,第 10 版[ICD-10]代码记录)之间的关联。我们纳入了所有在 16 岁及以上年龄采集 BMI 数据且随后有随访时间的个体。随访开始于以下最早的时间点:CPRD 研究标准随访开始时间、首次 BMI 记录的 5 周年纪念日或 1998 年 1 月 1 日(死亡登记数据开始日期);随访结束于死亡或 2016 年 3 月 8 日。完全调整的模型按性别分层,并根据基线年龄、吸烟、饮酒、糖尿病、多重剥夺指数和日历期进行调整。仅在从不吸烟者和整个研究人群中拟合模型。我们还进行了广泛的敏感性分析。通过包括 BMI、年龄和性别的泊松模型,估计了 40 岁时基线男性和女性的预期死亡年龄,按 BMI 类别计算。
共有 3632674 人纳入整个研究人群;以下结果来自从不吸烟者的分析,该分析包括 1969648 人和 188057 例死亡。BMI 与总体死亡率呈 J 形关联;每增加 5kg/m BMI 的估计风险比为 0.81(95%CI 0.80-0.82),低于 25kg/m,高于此点则为 1.21(1.20-1.22)。BMI 与除交通相关事故以外的所有死因类别有关,但关联的形状不同。大多数原因,包括癌症、心血管疾病和呼吸系统疾病,与 BMI 呈 J 形关联,风险最低发生在 21-25kg/m 范围内。对于精神和行为、神经和意外(非交通相关)原因,BMI 与死亡率呈负相关,直至 24-27kg/m,在更高的 BMI 下相关性较小;对于自杀或人际暴力导致的死亡,观察到线性负相关。BMI 与死亡率之间的关联在较年轻年龄比在较年长年龄更强,与最低死亡率风险相关的 BMI 在较年长个体中比在较年轻个体中更高。与健康体重(BMI 18.5-24.9kg/m)的个体相比,肥胖(BMI≥30.0kg/m)男性的预期寿命从 40 岁起缩短了 4.2 年,肥胖女性缩短了 3.5 年,体重不足(BMI<18.5kg/m)男性缩短了 4.3 年,体重不足女性缩短了 4.5 年。当吸烟者纳入分析时,大多数死因的结果大致相似,尽管 BMI 较低的人群中观察到略微更强的关联,表明吸烟略微残留混杂。
BMI 与总体死亡率和大多数特定死因呈 J 形关联;对于精神和行为、神经和外部原因,较低的 BMI 与增加的死亡风险相关。
惠康信托基金会。