Friday, July 20, 2012

Goodbye BMI. Hello ABSI.


Goodbye BMI. Hello ABSI. A new obesity metric.

A New Body Shape Index Predicts Mortality Hazard Independently of Body Mass Index
Nir Y. Krakauer1*, Jesse C. Krakauer2
1 Department of Civil Engineering, The City College of New York, New York, New York, United States of America, 2Middletown Medical, Middletown, New York, United States of America
Abstract

Background

Obesity, typically quantified in terms of Body Mass Index (BMI) exceeding threshold values, is considered a leading cause of premature death worldwide. For given body size (BMI), it is recognized that risk is also affected by body shape, particularly as a marker of abdominal fat deposits. Waist circumference (WC) is used as a risk indicator supplementary to BMI, but the high correlation of WC with BMI makes it hard to isolate the added value of WC.

Methods and Findings

We considered a USA population sample of 14,105 non-pregnant adults () from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 1999–2004 with follow-up for mortality averaging 5 yr (828 deaths). We developed A Body Shape Index (ABSI) based on WC adjusted for height and weight:
ABSI had little correlation with height, weight, or BMI. Death rates increased approximately exponentially with above average baseline ABSI (overall regression coefficient of  per standard deviation of ABSI [95% confidence interval: ]), whereas elevated death rates were found for both high and low values of BMI and WC.  () of the population mortality hazard was attributable to high ABSI, compared to  () for BMI and  () for WC. The association of death rate with ABSI held even when adjusted for other known risk factors including smoking, diabetes, blood pressure, and serum cholesterol. ABSI correlation with mortality hazard held across the range of age, sex, and BMI, and for both white and black ethnicities (but not for Mexican ethnicity), and was not weakened by excluding deaths from the first 3 yr of follow-up.
Conclusions
Body shape, as measured by ABSI, appears to be a substantial risk factor for premature mortality in the general population derivable from basic clinical measurements. ABSI expresses the excess risk from high WC in a convenient form that is complementary to BMI and to other known risk factors.

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