1 Ciccarone Center for the Prevention of Heart Disease Johns Hopkins School of Medicine Baltimore MD.
3 Department of Epidemiology Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Baltimore MD.
J Am Heart Assoc. 2018 Nov 20;7(22):e009599. doi: 10.1161/JAHA.118.009599.
Background Obesity contributes significantly to risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) and especially for heart failure (HF). An elevated body mass index (BMI) in older adults might not carry the same risk as in younger adults, but measured weights at other lifetime points are often not available. We determined the associations of self-reported weights from early- and mid-adulthood, after accounting for measured weight at older age, with incident HF/ASCVD risk. Methods and Results We studied 6437 MESA (Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis) participants (aged 45-84, free of baseline HF/ASCVD) with self-reported weights at ages 20 and 40 years (by questionnaire), measured weights at up to 5 in-person examinations (2000-2012), and follow-up for adjudicated HF/ASCVD events. Participant mean±SD age at the baseline examination was 62.2±10.2 years. Over median follow-up of 13 years, 290 HF and 828 ASCVD events occurred. After adjustment for cardiovascular risk factors and baseline BMI, higher self-reported weights at ages 20 and 40 years were independently associated with increased risk of incident HF with hazard ratios (95% confidence interval) of 1.27 (1.07-1.50) and 1.36 (1.18-1.57), respectively, per 5-kg/m higher BMI. For incident ASCVD, only higher BMI at age 20 years was associated after accounting for current BMI (1.13 [1.01-1.26] per 5 kg/m). Obesity during follow-up examinations was also associated with incident HF (1.72 [1.21-2.45]) but not ASCVD. Conclusions Self-reported lifetime weight is a low-tech tool easily utilized in any clinical encounter. Although subject to recall bias, self-reported weights may provide prognostic information about future HF risk, incremental to current BMI, in a multiethnic cohort of middle-aged to older adults. Clinical Trial Registration URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov . Unique identifier: NCT00005487.
背景 肥胖显著增加了动脉粥样硬化性心血管疾病(ASCVD)的风险,尤其是心力衰竭(HF)。老年人的体重指数(BMI)升高可能不像年轻人那样有风险,但通常无法获得其他生命阶段的测量体重。我们确定了在考虑到老年时的测量体重后,早期和中期成年时报告的体重与 HF/ASCVD 风险事件的相关性。
方法和结果 我们研究了 6437 名 MESA(动脉粥样硬化多民族研究)参与者(年龄在 45-84 岁,基线时无 HF/ASCVD),他们报告了 20 岁和 40 岁时的体重(通过问卷)、多达 5 次体检时的测量体重(2000-2012 年)以及 HF/ASCVD 事件的随访情况。基线检查时参与者的平均年龄为 62.2±10.2 岁。在中位随访 13 年后,发生了 290 例 HF 和 828 例 ASCVD 事件。在调整心血管危险因素和基线 BMI 后,较高的报告体重在 20 岁和 40 岁时与 HF 事件的发生风险增加独立相关,风险比(95%置信区间)分别为 1.27(1.07-1.50)和 1.36(1.18-1.57),每增加 5kg/m2 BMI。对于 ASCVD 事件,仅在考虑当前 BMI 后,20 岁时的 BMI 较高与事件相关(每增加 5kg/m2 BMI,风险比为 1.13 [1.01-1.26])。随访检查期间的肥胖也与 HF 事件相关(1.72 [1.21-2.45]),但与 ASCVD 无关。
结论 自我报告的终生体重是一种易于在任何临床环境中使用的低技术工具。尽管受到回忆偏倚的影响,但自我报告的体重可能为中年至老年的多种族队列提供关于未来 HF 风险的预后信息,与当前 BMI 相关且具有增量价值。