Wu Linna, Liu Hongyan, Cui Zhuang, Hou Fang, Gong Xiaowen, Zhang Yourui, Lu Chunlan, Liu Hao, Yu Pei
NHC Key Laboratory of Hormones and Development, Tianjin Key Laboratory of Metabolic Diseases, Chu Hsien-I Memorial Hospital and Tianjin Institute of Endocrinology, Tianjin Medical University, Tianjin, 300134, China.
Department of Epidemiology and Health Statistics, Tianjin Medical University, Tianjin, 300010, China.
Nutr Metab (Lond). 2021 Nov 13;18(1):99. doi: 10.1186/s12986-021-00627-3.
To evaluate the effect of fluctuations in waist circumference (WC), weight, and body mass index (BMI) on the incidence of diabetes in older adults.
A prospective cohort of 61,587 older adults (age, 60-96 years) who did not have diabetes at study initiation was examined. Data on weight, BMI, and WC were collected, and participants were followed up until 31 December 2018. The main end point was new-onset diabetes. A Cox regression model was used to estimate the risk of diabetes (hazard ratios [HRs] and confidence intervals [CI]) in these participants.
During a mean follow-up of 3.6 years, being overweight (HR [95% CI] 1.87 [1.62-2.17]), obesity (1.41 [1.26-1.59]), abdominal obesity (1.42 [1.28-1.58]), and obesity plus abdominal obesity at baseline (1.93 [1.66-2.25]) increased the risk of diabetes onset. Compared with older adults who "maintained normal WC", those who "remained abdominally obese" (HR = 1.66), "became abdominally obese" (HR = 1.58), or "achieved normal WC" (HR = 1.36) were at a higher risk of diabetes onset, as well as those with an increase in WC > 3 cm or > 5% compared with the baseline level. Weight gain or loss > 6 kg or weight gain > 5%, increase or decrease in BMI > 2 kg/m, or an increase in BMI > 10% were associated with a higher diabetes risk. The diabetes risk was reduced by 19% in overweight older adults who exercised daily.
For older adults, WC, BMI, and healthy weight maintenance reduce the diabetes risk. The findings may provide evidence for developing guidelines of proper weight and WC control for older adults.
评估腰围(WC)、体重和体重指数(BMI)波动对老年人糖尿病发病率的影响。
对61587名年龄在60 - 96岁、研究开始时无糖尿病的老年人进行前瞻性队列研究。收集体重、BMI和WC数据,并对参与者随访至2018年12月31日。主要终点是新发糖尿病。采用Cox回归模型估计这些参与者患糖尿病的风险(风险比[HRs]和置信区间[CI])。
在平均3.6年的随访期间,超重(HR[95%CI]1.87[1.62 - 2.17])、肥胖(1.41[1.26 - 1.59])、腹型肥胖(1.42[1.28 - 1.58])以及基线时肥胖加腹型肥胖(1.93[1.66 - 2.25])会增加糖尿病发病风险。与“维持正常WC”的老年人相比,“仍为腹型肥胖”(HR = 1.66)、“变为腹型肥胖”(HR = 1.58)或“实现正常WC”(HR = 1.36)的老年人患糖尿病的风险更高,与基线水平相比WC增加>3 cm或>5%的人也是如此。体重增加或减少>6 kg或体重增加>5%、BMI增加或减少>2 kg/m²或BMI增加>10%与更高的糖尿病风险相关。每天锻炼的超重老年人糖尿病风险降低19%。
对于老年人,WC、BMI和保持健康体重可降低糖尿病风险。这些发现可能为制定老年人适当体重和WC控制指南提供证据。