Stevens J, Plankey M W, Williamson D F, Thun M J, Rust P F, Palesch Y, O'Neil P M
Department of Nutrition, School of Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 27599, USA.
Obes Res. 1998 Jul;6(4):268-77. doi: 10.1002/j.1550-8528.1998.tb00349.x.
To examine the association of body mass index to all-cause and cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality in white and African American women.
Women who were members of the American Cancer Society Prevention Study I were examined in 1959 to 1960 and then followed 12 years for vital status. Data for this analysis were from 8,142 black and 100,000 white women. Body mass index (BMI) was calculated from reported height and weight. Associations were examined using Cox proportional hazards modeling with some analyses stratified by smoking (current or never) and educational status (less than complete high school or high school graduate).
There was a significant interaction between ethnicity and BMI for both all-cause (p<0.05) and CVD mortality (p<0.001). BMI (as a continuous variable) was associated with all-cause mortality in white women in all four groups defined by smoking and education. In black women with less than a high school education, there were no significant associations between BMI mortality. For high school-educated black women, there was a significant association between BMI and all-cause mortality. Among never smoking women with at least a high school education, models using the lowest BMI as the reference indicated a 40% higher risk of all-cause mortality at a BMI of 35.9 in black women vs. 27.3 in white women.
The impact of BMI on mortality was modified by educational level in black women; however, BMI was a less potent risk factor in black women than in white women in the same category of educational status.
研究白人及非裔美国女性的体重指数与全因死亡率和心血管疾病(CVD)死亡率之间的关联。
美国癌症协会预防研究I的女性成员于1959年至1960年接受检查,随后随访12年以了解其生命状态。本分析的数据来自8142名黑人女性和100000名白人女性。根据报告的身高和体重计算体重指数(BMI)。使用Cox比例风险模型进行关联分析,部分分析按吸烟状况(当前吸烟者或从不吸烟者)和教育程度(高中未毕业或高中毕业生)分层。
种族与BMI之间在全因死亡率(p<0.05)和CVD死亡率(p<0.001)方面均存在显著交互作用。BMI(作为连续变量)在由吸烟和教育程度定义的所有四组白人女性中均与全因死亡率相关。在高中未毕业的黑人女性中,BMI与死亡率之间无显著关联。对于高中文化程度的黑人女性,BMI与全因死亡率之间存在显著关联。在至少接受过高中教育的从不吸烟女性中,以最低BMI为参照的模型显示,BMI为35.9时,黑人女性的全因死亡风险比白人女性高40%(白人女性为27.3)。
BMI对死亡率的影响在黑人女性中因教育程度而有所改变;然而,在相同教育程度类别中,BMI在黑人女性中作为风险因素的效力低于白人女性。