Song Shuaihua, Yuan Yuan, Wu Xiaolong, Zhang Di, Qi Qianjin, Wang Haoran, Feng Li
Shandong Provincial Hospital Affiliated to Shandong First Medical University, Jinan, Shandong, China.
Department of Clinical Nutrition, Shandong Provincial Hospital Affiliated to Shandong First Medical University, Jinan, Shandong, China.
Front Nutr. 2022 Oct 21;9:999489. doi: 10.3389/fnut.2022.999489. eCollection 2022.
Obesity and vitamin D deficiency are both considered risk factors for mortality, but the potential additive effects of vitamin D status and obesity on mortality has not been well-studied. We aimed to examine the possible additive effects of obesity and vitamin D status on all-cause and cause-specific mortality. The data from the NHANES III (1988-1994) and NHANES 2001-2014 surveys were used, and multivariate Cox regression models were performed to assess the additive effects of vitamin D status and overweight/obesity/abdominal obesity on the all-cause, cardiovascular and cancer mortality, by stratifying Cox Hazard Ratios (HRs) across different categories of vitamin D status and body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference (WC) categories. The models were adjusted for age, race/ethnicity, gender, educational level, family income to poverty ratio, leisure-time physical activity, smoking, and drinking. Across all BMI/WC categories, there was an additive effect of the vitamin D both insufficiency and deficiency on all mortality rates, with deficiency having much stronger effect than insufficiency. Interestingly, the effect of vitamin D deficiency overcame the effect of obesity on all mortality rates. The highest HRs for overall and cardiovascular mortality were observed among vitamin D deficient obese/abdominally obese subjects, while for cancer mortality among vitamin D deficient normal weight/non-abdominally obese subjects. In stratified analyses, regarding all-cause mortality, there was an additive effect of the vitamin D both insufficiency and deficiency in all BMI/WC categories. Regarding cardiovascular mortality, there was an additive effect of vitamin D deficiency in all BMI/WC categories, but the additive effect of vitamin D insufficiency reached significance only in normal weight subjects. Regarding cancer mortality, the effect did not reach significance among obese subjects for vitamin D deficiency, while for insufficiency, significance was reached only among non-abdominally obese subjects. Interestingly, vitamin D surplus was associated with increased risk for cancer mortality in obese subjects, but there was an inadequate number of subjects in this category to make proper judgment. In conclusion, vitamin D insufficiency and deficiency gradually increase risk for mortality across all BMI/WC categories. In our analyses, vitamin D deficiency overcame the effect of obesity on mortality rates.
肥胖和维生素D缺乏均被视为死亡风险因素,但维生素D状态和肥胖对死亡率的潜在叠加效应尚未得到充分研究。我们旨在探讨肥胖和维生素D状态对全因死亡率和特定病因死亡率的可能叠加效应。使用了来自美国国家健康与营养检查调查III(1988 - 1994年)和2001 - 2014年调查的数据,并进行多变量Cox回归模型分析,通过对不同维生素D状态类别以及体重指数(BMI)和腰围(WC)类别分层Cox风险比(HRs),来评估维生素D状态和超重/肥胖/腹型肥胖对全因、心血管和癌症死亡率的叠加效应。模型对年龄、种族/民族、性别、教育水平、家庭收入与贫困比率、休闲时间身体活动、吸烟和饮酒进行了校正。在所有BMI/WC类别中,维生素D不足和缺乏对所有死亡率均有叠加效应,缺乏的影响比不足更强。有趣的是,维生素D缺乏对所有死亡率的影响超过了肥胖的影响。维生素D缺乏的肥胖/腹型肥胖受试者中观察到总体和心血管死亡率的最高HRs,而维生素D缺乏的正常体重/非腹型肥胖受试者中癌症死亡率最高。在分层分析中,就全因死亡率而言,在所有BMI/WC类别中维生素D不足和缺乏均有叠加效应。就心血管死亡率而言,在所有BMI/WC类别中维生素D缺乏有叠加效应,但维生素D不足的叠加效应仅在正常体重受试者中具有统计学意义。就癌症死亡率而言,维生素D缺乏在肥胖受试者中效应未达到统计学意义,而对于维生素D不足,仅在非腹型肥胖受试者中具有统计学意义。有趣的是,维生素D过量与肥胖受试者癌症死亡风险增加相关,但该类别受试者数量不足,无法做出恰当判断。总之,在所有BMI/WC类别中,维生素D不足和缺乏会逐渐增加死亡风险。在我们的分析中,维生素D缺乏对死亡率的影响超过了肥胖的影响。