School of Kinesiology and Health Science, York University, Toronto, Canada.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Jun 13;14(6):e0218307. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0218307. eCollection 2019.
The association between metabolic syndrome (MetS) and all-cause mortality is well established but it is unclear if there are differences in mortality risk among the 32 possible MetS combinations. Hence, the purpose of this study is to evaluate the associations between different MetS combinations and its individual components with all-cause mortality, and to examine differences in the association by age and sex.
A merged sample of 82,717 adults from 7 U.S. cohorts was used.
In our sample, MetS was present in 32% of men, 34% of women, 28% of younger adults (18-65 years) and 62% of older adults (>65 years) with 14,989 deaths over 14.6 ± 7.4 years of follow-up. Risk of all-cause mortality was higher in younger individuals with a greater number of MetS factors present, but in older adults having all 5 MetS factors was the only combination significantly associated with mortality. Regardless of age or sex, elevated blood pressure was the MetS factor most consistently present in MetS combinations that were significantly and most strongly associated with mortality. In fact, elevated blood pressure in the absence of other risk factors was significantly associated with mortality in men (HR, 95% CI = 1.56, 1.33-1.84), women (HR = 1.62, 1.44-1.81) and younger adults (HR = 1.61, 1.45-1.79). Conversely, waist circumference, glucose and triglycerides in isolation were not associated with mortality (p>0.05).
In a large U.S. population, different combinations of MetS components vary substantially in their associations with all-cause mortality. Men, women and younger individuals with MetS combinations including elevated blood pressure had stronger associations with greater mortality risk, with minimal associations between MetS and mortality risk in older adults. Thus, we suggest that future algorithms may wish to consider differential weighting of these common metabolic risk factors, particularly in younger populations.
代谢综合征(MetS)与全因死亡率之间存在关联,但目前尚不清楚 32 种可能的 MetS 组合中死亡率风险是否存在差异。因此,本研究旨在评估不同 MetS 组合及其各组成部分与全因死亡率的相关性,并通过年龄和性别来检验相关性的差异。
本研究使用了来自美国 7 个队列的 82717 名成年人的合并样本。
在我们的样本中,32%的男性、34%的女性、28%的年轻成年人(18-65 岁)和 62%的老年成年人(>65 岁)存在 MetS,随访 14.6±7.4 年后共有 14989 人死亡。在年轻个体中,随着 MetS 因素数量的增加,全因死亡率的风险更高,但在老年成年人中,只有存在所有 5 个 MetS 因素的组合与死亡率显著相关。无论年龄或性别如何,血压升高都是与死亡率显著相关的 MetS 因素中最常见的存在。事实上,在没有其他危险因素的情况下,血压升高与男性(HR,95%CI=1.56,1.33-1.84)、女性(HR=1.62,1.44-1.81)和年轻成年人(HR=1.61,1.45-1.79)的死亡率显著相关。相反,腰围、血糖和甘油三酯单独存在与死亡率无关(p>0.05)。
在一项大型美国人群研究中,MetS 成分的不同组合与全因死亡率的相关性存在显著差异。患有包括血压升高在内的 MetS 组合的男性、女性和年轻个体与更高的死亡率风险具有更强的相关性,而老年成年人中 MetS 与死亡率风险之间的相关性则较小。因此,我们建议未来的算法可能希望考虑对这些常见代谢危险因素进行差异化加权,特别是在年轻人群中。