Department of Cardiology, Guangdong Cardiovascular Institute, Hypertension Research Laboratory, Guangdong Provincial People's Hospital, Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Coronary Heart Disease Prevention, Guangdong Academy of Medical Sciences, South China University of Technology School of Medicine, Guangzhou, China
Centre for Global Cardiometabolic Health, Department of Epidemiology, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, USA.
Postgrad Med J. 2021 May;97(1147):306-311. doi: 10.1136/postgradmedj-2020-137542. Epub 2020 May 5.
Given the fat redistribution in later stages of life, how the associations between abdominal obesity and the risk of morbidity and mortality have changed with age have not been elucidated, especially for waist to height ratio (WHtR).
To compare the strength of association between obesity indices and chronic diseases at baseline, and the subsequent mortality risk among US adults.
We included 21 109 participants from National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 1999-2014. We performed logistic regression and receiver operating curve analysis to examine the discriminatory power of obesity indicators on cardiometabolic diseases and cancer at baseline. Sex-stratified and age-stratified Cox models were constructed to explore the prospective association between obesity indices and all-cause, cardiovascular and cancer mortality.
Elevated WHtR, elevated waist circumference (WC) and body mass index (BMI)-classified obesity are associated with higher odds of hypertension (OR: 1.37-2.13), dyslipidemia (OR: 1.06 to 1.75, all p<0.05) and diabetes (OR: 1.40-3.16, all p<0.05). WHtR had significantly better discriminatory power to predict cardiometabolic health than BMI, especially for diabetes (area under the curve: 0.709 vs 0.654). After multivariable adjustment, all obesity indicators are associated with lower risk of all-cause mortality among females aged ≥65 years (HR: 0.64 to 0.85), but the association was only significant for BMI when obesity indicators were mutually adjusted (HR: 0.79).
WHtR and WC appeared to be the better indicators for cardiometabolic health than BMI. However, BMI had a stronger and inverse association with a greater risk of all-cause mortality among older females.
鉴于生命后期的脂肪再分布,腹型肥胖与发病率和死亡率风险之间的关联随年龄的变化尚未阐明,尤其是腰围身高比(WHtR)。
比较肥胖指数与美国成年人基线时慢性病的关联强度,以及随后的死亡率风险。
我们纳入了 1999-2014 年国家健康和营养调查(NHANES)的 21109 名参与者。我们进行了逻辑回归和接收者操作曲线分析,以检查肥胖指标对基线时心血管代谢疾病和癌症的区分能力。构建了性别分层和年龄分层的 Cox 模型,以探讨肥胖指数与全因、心血管和癌症死亡率的前瞻性关联。
升高的 WHtR、升高的腰围(WC)和 BMI 分类肥胖与高血压(OR:1.37-2.13)、血脂异常(OR:1.06-1.75,均<0.05)和糖尿病(OR:1.40-3.16,均<0.05)的几率较高相关。WHtR 对预测心血管代谢健康的区分能力明显优于 BMI,尤其是对糖尿病(曲线下面积:0.709 比 0.654)。在多变量调整后,所有肥胖指标与≥65 岁女性的全因死亡率风险降低相关(HR:0.64-0.85),但当肥胖指标相互调整时,仅 BMI 与死亡率呈显著负相关(HR:0.79)。
WHtR 和 WC 似乎比 BMI 更能反映心血管代谢健康。然而,BMI 与全因死亡率风险增加之间存在更强和相反的关联,特别是在老年女性中。