Department of Epidemiology and Health Statistics, West China School of Public Health and West China Fourth Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China.
Front Public Health. 2024 May 30;12:1389766. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1389766. eCollection 2024.
Premature death is a global health indicator, significantly impacted by obesity, especially in young and middle-aged population. Both body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference (WC) assess obesity, with WC specifically indicating central obesity and showing a stronger relationship with mortality. However, despite known associations between BMI and premature death, as well as the well-recognized correlation between WC and adverse health outcomes, the specific relationship between WC and premature death remains unclear. Therefore, focusing on young and middle-aged individuals, this study aimed to reliably estimate independent and combined associations between WC, BMI and premature death, thereby providing causal evidence to support strategies for obesity management.
This study involved 49,217 subjects aged 18-50 years in the United States from 1999 to 2018 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). Independent and combined associations between WC and BMI with premature death across sex and age stratum were examined by Cox regression. Survey weighting and inverse probability weighting (IPW) were further considered to control selection and confounding bias. Robustness assessment has been conducted on both NHANES and China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS) data.
A linear and positive relationship between WC and all-cause premature death was found in both males and females, with adjusted s of 1.019 (95% = 1.004-1.034) and 1.065 (95% = 1.039-1.091), respectively. Nonlinear relationships were found with respect to BMI and all-cause premature death. For females aged 36-50 with a BMI below 28.6 kg/m, the risk of premature death decreased as BMI increased, indicated by adjusted s of 0.856 (95% = 0.790-0.927). Joint analysis showed among people living with obesity, a larger WC increased premature death risk ( = 1.924, 95% = 1.444-2.564).
WC and BMI exhibited prominent associations with premature death in young and middle-aged population. Maintaining an appropriate WC and BMI bears significant implications for preventing premature death.
过早死亡是一个全球健康指标,受肥胖影响显著,尤其是在年轻和中年人群中。身体质量指数(BMI)和腰围(WC)都可用于评估肥胖,而 WC 则专门表示中心性肥胖,与死亡率的关系更强。然而,尽管 BMI 与过早死亡之间存在已知关联,WC 与不良健康结果之间也存在明显相关性,但 WC 与过早死亡之间的具体关系尚不清楚。因此,本研究重点关注年轻和中年人群,旨在可靠估计 WC、BMI 与过早死亡之间的独立和联合关联,从而为肥胖管理策略提供因果证据支持。
本研究纳入了 1999 年至 2018 年美国国家健康和营养调查(NHANES)中年龄在 18-50 岁的 49217 名受试者。采用 Cox 回归分析了 WC 和 BMI 与不同性别和年龄分层的过早死亡之间的独立和联合关联。进一步考虑了调查加权和逆概率加权(IPW),以控制选择和混杂偏倚。在 NHANES 和中国健康与养老追踪调查(CHARLS)数据上进行了稳健性评估。
在男性和女性中,WC 与全因过早死亡之间呈线性正相关,校正后 s 值分别为 1.019(95%CI:1.004-1.034)和 1.065(95%CI:1.039-1.091)。BMI 与全因过早死亡之间呈非线性关系。对于年龄在 36-50 岁、BMI 低于 28.6kg/m2 的女性,随着 BMI 的增加,过早死亡的风险降低,校正后 s 值为 0.856(95%CI:0.790-0.927)。联合分析显示,在肥胖人群中,较大的 WC 增加了过早死亡的风险( = 1.924,95%CI:1.444-2.564)。
WC 和 BMI 与年轻和中年人群的过早死亡有显著关联。保持适当的 WC 和 BMI 对预防过早死亡具有重要意义。